Parachutes
Parachutes book cover

Parachutes

Hardcover – May 26, 2020

Price
$14.32
Format
Hardcover
Pages
496
Publisher
Katherine Tegen Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0062941084
Dimensions
5.5 x 1.49 x 8.25 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

“[ Parachutes ] is about the radical possibility of young women finding and detonating their voices. Yang takes a sledgehammer to rape culture itself, swinging with equal parts artistry and force. If this were a television series it would look fabulous and land deep.” — New York Times Book Review "In her YA debut, Yang ( Front Desk ) draws from personal experience and the news to tell a contemporary story of class discrepancy, the pervasiveness of rape culture, and the Asian diaspora... a multifaceted read, by turns poignant, fun, and exultant in its celebration of the multitudinous experiences and strength inherent in diasporic identity." — Publishers Weekly (starred review) "A fierce entrance into YA, navigating a plethora of complex themes with great honesty... Claire and Dani’s mettle and solidarity as they contend with the institutions and privilege that hide abuse is gripping and empowering. Yang offers a compelling exploration of the parachute experience and the intersection of ethnicity, class, and reputation, while underscoring striking cultural parallels between America and China. Strong characterization and thoughtful writing make for an unforgettable read." — ALA Booklist (starred review) "Yang deftly weaves in parallels to recent real-life events... On top of these explorations of nationality and wealth is the realistically pervasive look at rape culture...xa0In short alternating chapters narrated by Dani and Claire, Yang creates a delicate balance between these heavier issues and the lighter moments of high school... [A]xa0powerful exploration of race, class, and power through multiple lenses... An engrossing read that will spark discussions on a wide range of issues." — School Library Journal (starred review) "Yang has created two distinct and vibrant voices that shimmer with passion for both justice and independence... The convincing narrative, told in alternating first-person perspectives, confronts pervasive and xenophobic stereotypes, with secondary characters’ complex identities adding depth and emotion to the story." — Horn Book Magazine "Yang writes astutely about the destabilizing combination of family expectations, copious wealth, and absence of adult supervision. She’s also sharply perceptive about the class and race complexities of a community that contains rich Asian visitors and American-born Asians, great wealth and straitened circumstances... A spirited slice of cultural life and story of girls facing cruel inequities, and Yang’s compelling author’s note about parachutes and her own experience of being sexually assaulted adds another poignant facet." — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books “Parachutes is a force. As fast-paced as it is powerful, its story of immigration, social class, and rape culture calls out the damaging consequences of privilege in ways that will make readers want to speak up and take action.”xa0 — Randy Ribay, National Book Award finalist and author of Patron Saints of Nothing “ Parachutes is not just a searing drama that explores the lives of Asians in America, it’s a courageous, empowering story about how high women can soar when they lift each other up.” — Stacey Lee, award-winning author of The Downstairs Girl Awards and Praise for Front Desk : Asian / Pacific American Award for Children’s LiteratureParents’ Choice Gold Medal Fiction Award WinnerNamed a Best Book of the Year by:NPRKirkus ReviewsPublishers WeeklyWashington PostAmazonSchool Library JournalBookpageNew York Public LibraryChicago Public LibraryTop Ten Debut Novels 2018 — ALA Booklist * “Debut author Yang weaves in autobiographical content while creating a feisty and empowered heroine. The supporting characters are rich in voice and context ...achingly reveal life in America in the 1990s for persons of color and those living in poverty.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) * “Mia herself is an irresistible protagonist, and it is a pleasure to see both her writing and her power grow... Many young readers will see themselves in Mia and her friends.... A swiftly moving plot and a winsome protagonist.” — School Library Journal (starred review) * “It’s the details that sing in this novel...This book will help foster empathy for the immigrant experience for young readers, while for immigrant children, it is a much-needed and validating mirror....Deserving of shelf space in every classroom and library.” — Booklist (starred review) “Reminiscent of the television series Fresh Off the Boat ... Basing the story on her own childhood experiences, Yang writes Mia’s dreams into reality without sacrificing or minimizing the heartbreaking realities of many immigrants’ hardships... there is much satisfaction in this book’s powerful and heart-wrenching close.” — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books (starred review) “ Front Desk is a story about the hardships of immigrant life, the perpetuation of injustice, and a sweet, kind, indomitable young girl who chooses to rise up and fight no matter how hard it gets. Kelly Yang’s debut is a stunner. — Mike Jung, author of Unidentified Suburban Object “In this noteworthy, immensely enjoyable novel, Kelly Yang ( Front Desk ) tackles some of the systemic inequalities that foster racism, misogyny and sexual assault. She convincingly brings to light ways in which victims are often judged more harshly than their aggressors, but also provides a template for change.xa0Yang dives with aplomb into issues of opulence and poverty, power and impotence.” — Shelf Awareness Kelly Yang is the New York Times bestselling author of Front Desk , Three Keys , and Room to Dream and is the winner of the Asian/Pacific American Award for Children’s Literature. She went to college at age thirteen and is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley and Harvard Law School. She is the founder of the Kelly Yang Project, a leading writing and debating program for children in Asia. She lived in Hong Kong for fifteen years, where she taught many parachutes and was a columnist for the South China Morning Post . Her writing has also been published in the New York Times , the Washington Post , and the Atlantic . Kelly currently lives in Los Angeles with her family. Please find her online at www.kellyyang.com. Parachutes is her YA debut.

Features & Highlights

  • Speak
  • enters the world of
  • Gossip Girl
  • in this modern immigrant story from
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Kelly Yang about two girls navigating wealth, power, friendship, and trauma.
  • They’re called parachutes: teenagers dropped off to live in private homes and study in the United States while their wealthy parents remain in Asia. Claire Wang never thought she’d be one of them, until her parents pluck her from her privileged life in Shanghai and enroll her at a high school in California.
  • Suddenly she finds herself living in a stranger’s house, with no one to tell her what to do for the first time in her life. She soon embraces her newfound freedom, especially when the hottest and most eligible parachute, Jay, asks her out.
  • Dani De La Cruz, Claire’s new host sister, couldn’t be less thrilled that her mom rented out a room to Claire. An academic and debate team star, Dani is determined to earn her way into Yale, even if it means competing with privileged kids who are buying their way to the top. But Dani’s game plan veers unexpectedly off course when her debate coach starts working with her privately.
  • As they steer their own distinct paths, Dani and Claire keep crashing into one another, setting a course that will change their lives forever.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(311)
★★★★
25%
(130)
★★★
15%
(78)
★★
7%
(36)
-7%
(-36)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Important book on the power of speaking out

Parachutes follows the lives of two teenage girls. Claire Wang is an international student from an affluent family in Shanghai, China. Despite her initial misgivings about finishing high school in the U.S., she quickly makes friends with other “parachutes” (teenagers dropped off to live in private homes and study in the US while their wealthy parents remain in Asia), attracts the attention of the most eligible parachute, and sets out to embrace her newfound freedom. Dani De La Cruz, Claire’s host sister, is a scholarship student from a Filipino single-mother household. She’s on the debate team and works after school as a maid to support her family. Miscommunications and initial biases cause Dani and Claire to avoid each other, but as their lives spiral out of control, they’ll learn that they share more in common than they think.

There’s a lot to talk about with this novel. I felt like I got a bit of Loveboat, Taipei with the diverse cast of asian teens set loose in a foreign country (this time moving from Asia to the U.S.). I got a bit of Speak with the struggle for the victims to speak up about what happened to them. And I got Claire and Dani and Ming and Jess and Florence. These teen girls have their struggles, their conflicts, and they make mistakes, but in the end, they have each other’s backs. A shout-out also goes to the adults who take a stand for justice when the world tells them to do otherwise.

Parachutes gives a raw portrayal of the pain and suffering of the victims of sexual harassment and sexual assault: the blame, the fear, the suffocation of knowing that the system protects the perpetrator, not the victim. The struggle of whether to press charges because she has to think about her future, and everyone encourages her to “get over it” and “move on.” And Parachutes gives us insight into the broken system. It shows us the objectification of women, broken homes with absent parents, the presence of money and lack of affection, the belief that if you want a guy, you’re going to have to "let him touch a lot more than your ears.” How a woman becomes marriageable material because she’s a virgin, when the truth is that “everyone’s wife material. Me, you, your mom, everyone.”

Parachutes also reveals many of the struggles within the asian community, struggles that make it difficult for victims to speak out: the importance of saving face, the belief that “everything’s better from America,” and the need to be a “good Chinese girl.” Even if Claire, or one of her friends, wants to speak up, she can think of many other reasons to remain silent. And so they make mistakes, they struggle in silence, and misunderstandings arise because of their lack of communication. Other issues addressed include own-race biases and racial discrimination.

Parachutes asks, “What does it mean to live well? And on what terms?” What do you do if the world tells you to remain silent when you know that it is right to speak up? In Parachutes, Kelly Yang gives voice to women who have been silenced by the system. The ending does not give us justice, but it does give us hope: hope in sisterhood, hope in claiming our voices, hope that one day justice will be made available to all.

Themes include family, friendship, love, betrayal, forgiveness, trauma, corruption, and the power of speaking out.
5 people found this helpful
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poignant story of friendship and perserverance

(Disclaimer: I received this book from Edelweiss. This has not impacted my review which is unbiased and honest.)

TW: Sexual harassent, rape, racism

Parachutes is a book about opposite worlds. Two girls who are so alike, but couldn't have grown up more different, struggling with trying to figure out who they are, their family situation, and love. They are asked how much they are willing to pay for freedom. For the life that they want. It's a book that tackles issues of racism, sexual assault, speaking up, and a culture that tries to silence girls. All while being inextricably linked with privilege, money, and corruption.

Yang allows both Claire, a rich parachute from Shanghai, and Dani, a poor Fillipino girl struggling with her future, to be complex, flawed, and human. While Parachutes has plenty of action, it is propelled by its characters. Whether that be Claire's struggle with her family pressure, Dani's confrontation with corruption, or even Ming, a lesbian scholarship student from China. Parachutes is complex, tackling issues of racism and the dangers that these girls face on all avenues. While I am not an ownvoices reader for these identities, I could deeply identify with Dani's principles when confronted with corruption, as well as the challenges Claire faces from both her fellow Asians in the US and the non-POC characters - not being accepted by either.
2 people found this helpful
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a fantastic YA debut

See more of my reviews on The YA Kitten! My copy was an ARC I got as a reviewer for YA Books Central.

Content warnings: sexual harassment, sexual assault (off-page, not detailed)

I just can’t leave books about sexual abuse/assault alone. Having survived sexual abuse myself, it’s an issue near and dear to my heart. Some of them get me furious in all the right ways and others utterly fail me, but I rarely come out of one feeling whelmed. Parachutes is a case of the former and a damn good read about friendship, rape culture, and corruption.

Claire is a rich Chinese girl living the high life in Shanghai with both her parents even though her dad is usually gone because he’s working or spending time with one of his mistresses. Meanwhile, Dani is a Filipina American debate team star living paycheck to paycheck with her mom since her dad skipped out on the family. When Claire’s parents take her out of her Chinese private school and send her to the United States for an American education, it’s Dani’s house she’s staying in. Dani’s a bit of a snob and Claire is so privileged she doesn’t know how to do laundry, so they butt heads more than a few times.

Then sexual violence enters their lives. The popular Chinese boy Claire’s been dating rapes her after she breaks up with him; Dani’s debate teacher makes an inappropriate move on her after a tournament and makes life difficult for her when she tries to tell her private school’s administration.

I hate everyone who puts them through hell, but the work Dani puts into finding out who alerted the school to her anonymous online confession is incredible, leading her down a rabbit hole of corruption both inside the school and in the larger community. It makes discovering that her one of her teammates has been paying for speeches look like nothing. She may not be interested in journalism, but she’s got the dedication of the best kind of investigative reporter.

The way they’re treated for telling people what happened to them is absolutely infuriating, especially when Claire goes through an in-school kangaroo court she never had a chance with. The accused’s father basically owns the school and the town, after all. None of them are going to find his son responsible for his actions. Unfortunately, it’s also quite truthful to what people are put through when they come forward. Yang’s own author’s note tells readers Claire’s hearing is pretty close to what happened to her in college.

Not even Claire’s parents have any sympathy for her when she tells then what her ex did to her. Her appearance-obsessed mother makes it about how their family will look if people know Claire suffered through a rape, not what Claire has been through and how she feels about it. That attitude makes me curious about rape culture in China and the rest of the world. I know the beast in the United States all too well, but other countries have different versions of rape culture.

If you need a breather from the more serious stuff, there’s also a love triangle between Dani, her longtime crush Zach, and Claire. It’s a little bit dramatic at times, but considering everything the book deals with, it’s a welcome change of pace. Zach offers both girls the support they need, though it takes a while for him to understand how much they need it or why.

And that climax with Dani’s improvised competition speech? Oh my GOD, I loved it. I could only dream of being able to out my abuser on such a big stage with all those ears tuned to my frequency.

If you’re looking for a conclusive ending with concrete consequences for Claire and Dani’s abusers, you won’t find it. You don’t see the aftermath of what the the girls choose to do. In a way, it’s a hopeful ending. You get to make the choice of whether the girls get justice after everything they’ve been through. Maybe you’re a realist who wouldn’t choose that ending, but everyone has their own view. Parachutes is a fantastic YA debut from Kelly Yang and I look forward to seeing more from her.
1 people found this helpful
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Unexpected surprise

4.5 stars.

Whoa there is so much packed into this it's hard to find the words. I loved the ending and how it all wrapped up, I'd even love a book 2 for side characters and a small open ending. I flew through this audiobook in about 2 days, I just wanted to keep going.