Dear America Chapter Summaries

Words: 815
Pages: 4

This book is a definite conversation starter. It shows the gap between the last generation and the newer one. It can help the older generation understand how the younger feels, and the flip side of that. People might find it easier to bring up more sensitive topics with their children now and find it easier to breach the gap between them. Reading some of these things made me wonder about how my mother felt about how times have changed and how I am different than her, even though this book is set years and years before that. It might allow other people to think about their parents and children and how they feel. The author presented it well by adding stories by both the mothers and daughters, and stories about both of their childhoods, even though they're all adults now. It will also have people thinking about their childhoods, and they may want to talk with their children about that as well. It can present different …show more content…
The American people looked down on the Chinese, and the Irish Americans, for taking their jobs, no matter how small or unfilled. They tried to change the Chinese language so they would fit in and be like the American citizens, and they and banned the Chinese from being natural citizens, among many other things. They were constantly discriminated against. A few of the mothers briefly bring up the discrimination against them, but it is supplanted by the dreams they have for their families throughout this struggle. America promotes freedom for all its people, and it should not have been as difficult as it was for these dedicated women to obtain jobs, marry, raise families and make a life for themselves. They had to create their own group of all Chinese immigrant families, and the group symbolizes how they had to work together and live away from the “community” of the American born citizens and were shunned from most American