2010 National Book Award Finalist
2011 American Book Award Winner
2010 California Book Award Winner
2011 Asian American Literary Award Fiction Finalist
2011 Asian American Literary Award Membersâ Choice Winner
2011 Asian/Pacific American Library Association (APALA) Book Award Winner in Adult Fiction
Entropy, âBest of 2019â
âStunningly complete. . . . Yamashita accomplishes a dynamic feat of mimesis by throwing together achingly personal stories of lovers, old men, and orphaned children; able synopses of historical events and social upheaval . . . This powerful, deeply felt, and impeccably researched fiction is irresistibly evocative.â âPublishers Weekly, starred review
âExuberant, irreverent, passionately researched . . . Yamashitaâs colossal novel of the dawn of Asian American culture is the literary equivalent of an intricate and vibrant street mural depicting a clamorous and righteous era of protest and creativity.â âBooklist, starred review
âThe extraordinary testimony of a revolutionary past. . . . I Hotel is crammed with detail, with real-life pamphlets, speeches, quotes, and news reports humming and crackling in the background. The whole thing makes for an astonishing, and carefully structured, collage of both local and global movement.â âThe Nation
âI Hotel is a brilliant, vibrantly written exploration of politics, identity, radicalism, and activism. Fusing and bending styles, Yamashitaâs prose sweeps the reader along with the same manifestos-at-midnight energy that drove the massive cultural changes of the â60s and â70s. Over the years since I first read it, I Hotel has grown in importance to me as a reader, as a bookseller, as a writer, and as a citizen. It is an absolute masterpiece of twenty-first century American literature.â âJosh Cook
â[I Hotel is] one of my favorite books of all time.â âJeff VanderMeer
âI Hotel is an explosive site, a profound metaphor and jazzy, epic novel rolled into one. Karen Tei Yamashita chronicles the colliding arts and social movements in the Bay Area of the wayward â70s with fierce intelligence, humor, and empathy.â âJessica Hagedorn
âIf you were there in 1970s San Francisco, then this book is about you. At some point in reading I Hotel, I lost all objectivity. I wept, I laughed, I read silently while moving my lips. And I read the last twelve pages again and again as if an ancestor had written them.â âShawn Wong
âA multiform swirl of a novel about a decade in the life of San Franciscoâs Chinatown and, by extension, the Asian experience in America. . . . With delightful plays of voice and structure, this is literary fiction at an adventurous, experimental high point.â âKirkus
âThis is an ambitious epic novel. . . . Stylistically innovative, vertiginous, and sweeping, this novel achieves a miraculous blend of fact and fiction and animates an epoch when individuals tried in vain to dissolve their personalities in the rhetoric of revolutionary idealism.â â2010 National Book Award Judgesâ Citation
âThis is such a wonderful book. If you read Thomas Pynchon or you read David Foster Wallace, or any of those post-modern novels, this is the book you need to read.â âMPR News
âAs original as it is political, as hilarious as it is heartbreaking, I Hotel is the result of a decade of research and writing that included more than 150 personal interviews. . . . [and] will be dog-eared and underlined and assigned to college reading lists for generations. . . . In the end, the way I Hotel accounts for the Asian American movement is both sweet and sour. And for all the losses Yamashita records, there are, we know, great achievements as well. High among them is this beautiful book.â âWashington Post Book World
âBrilliant. . . . [Yamashitaâs] ambition is achieved with efficiency, showmanship and wit. . . . A surgically deft depiction of the political entwined with the personal. . . . Yamashitaâs book recalls what art is for: âTo resist death and dementia . . . To kiss . . . you good-bye, leaving the indelible spit of our DNA on still moist lips. Sweet. Sour. Salty. Bitter.â In other words, I Hotelâââs complex taste lingers and haunts, like something alive.â âStar Tribune
âYamashita captures the fiery righteousnessâand self-righteousnessâof the civil-rights movement. . . . The complexity of the era that led to the birth of Asian America. Itâs a glorious tone poem, a rich reminder of the multicultural, multifaceted past from which our city grows.â âSan Francisco Magazine
âItâs a stylistically wild ride, but itâs smart, funny and entrancing.â âMichael Schaub, NPR
âThe breadth of I Hotelâââs embrace is encyclopedic and its effect is kaleidoscopic. It wants to inform and dazzle us on the confusions and conclusions on the question of culture and assimilation.â âChicago Tribune
â[Yamashitaâs] novel is breathtaking in its scope and its energy and innovation make it a good fit with the exciting and transformative time period that it covers. . . . I Hotel demonstrates how complicated and finally irreducible history isâthe many voices and perspectives it comprises, the divergent and winding paths it takes, the way it confounds conventional narrative. Yamashita celebrates this complexity, and sheâs such a deft storyteller that youâll end up celebrating it with her.â âWomenâs Review of Books
âMagnificent. . . . Intriguing.â âLibrary Journal
âI Hotel is an amazing literary accomplishment and one of the most pleasurable reading experiences I have ever had. I believe it stands on the same plane of accomplishment as Roberto Bolañoâs Savage Detectives and Edward P. Jonesâs The Known Worldâan amazing literary accomplishment and a brave and bold act of publishing.â âPaul Yamazaki, City Lights Booksellers
âI Hotel by Karen Tei Yamashita is the kind of book that changed the way I think about what books are capable of. Itâs a peopleâs history, an activistâs archive, a remembrance of time and place, and a powerful reminder that our assumptions about literature ought to be upended from time to time. It is not hyperbole to assert that I Hotel is unlike anything I have ever read. One of the most challenging and rewarding books, and an all-time favorite of mine.â âMatt Keliher, Subtext Books
âI Hotel is at once heartrending and hilarious, both political and personal. And perhaps most thankfully, the writing is wicked smart without a drop of pretentiousness. Filled with pages that take big risks, I Hotel opens up new possibilities, not just for Asian American literature but also for contemporary fiction in general.â âNami Mun, Asian American Literary Awards Judgesâ Citation
âHuge, messy, and frantically fun, I Hotel offers a very believable panorama of life at this time. . . . The portraits of these early generation Asian Americans . . . are quite moving and conveyed without sentimentality. Itâs an impressive accomplishment from an author who continues to push the boundaries of innovative fiction.â âRain Taxi
âOne of the the things that is so amazing about Karen Tei Yamashitaâs most recent novel, I Hotel, is that she not only retrieves the sad beauty of a particularly fraught period of a particularly squalid communityâAsian Americans in San Francisco during the 1960s-70sâbut that she does so in a way that is also exhilarating, celebratory. . . . Which is why we need novels like I Hotel: to patiently help the world remember itself.â âAmerican Book Review
âI Hotel is arguably the best book published on Asian American literary history.â âThe International Examiner
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I Hotel (Tenth Anniversary Edition)
A novel by Karen Tei Yamashita, introduction by Jessica Hagedorn
October 8, 2019 âąÂ 6 x 9 âąÂ 648 pages ⹠978-1-56689-545-3
Â
An epic journey through one of Americaâs most transformative decades via the stories of the activists, laborers, and students who shaped it.
Dazzling and ambitious, this multivoiced fusion of prose, playwriting, graphic art, and philosophy spins an epic tale of Americaâs struggle for civil rights as it played out in San Francisco near the end of the 1960s. As Karen Tei Yamashitaâs motley cast of students, laborers, artists, revolutionaries, and provocateurs make their way through the history of the day, they become caught in a riptide of politics and passion, clashing ideologies, and personal turmoil.
The tenth anniversary edition of this National Book Award finalist brings the joys and struggles of the I Hotel to a whole new generation of readers, historians, and activists.
About the Author
Karen Tei Yamashita is the author of Letters to Memory, Through the Arc of the Rain Forest, Brazil-Maru, Tropic of Orange, Circle K Cycles, National Book Award finalist I Hotel, and Anime Wong. She has been a U.S. Artists Ford Foundation Fellow and co-holder of the University of California Presidential Chair for Feminist Critical Race and Ethnic Studies. She is Professor Emeritus of Literature and Creative Writing at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Praise for I Hotel
2010 National Book Award Finalist
2011 American Book Award Winner
2010 California Book Award Winner
2011 Asian American Literary Award Fiction Finalist
2011 Asian American Literary Award Membersâ Choice Winner
2011 Asian/Pacific American Library Association (APALA) Book Award Winner in Adult Fiction
Entropy, âBest of 2019â
âStunningly complete. . . . Yamashita accomplishes a dynamic feat of mimesis by throwing together achingly personal stories of lovers, old men, and orphaned children; able synopses of historical events and social upheaval . . . This powerful, deeply felt, and impeccably researched fiction is irresistibly evocative.â âPublishers Weekly, starred review
âExuberant, irreverent, passionately researched . . . Yamashitaâs colossal novel of the dawn of Asian American culture is the literary equivalent of an intricate and vibrant street mural depicting a clamorous and righteous era of protest and creativity.â âBooklist, starred review
âThe extraordinary testimony of a revolutionary past. . . . I Hotel is crammed with detail, with real-life pamphlets, speeches, quotes, and news reports humming and crackling in the background. The whole thing makes for an astonishing, and carefully structured, collage of both local and global movement.â âThe Nation
âI Hotel is a brilliant, vibrantly written exploration of politics, identity, radicalism, and activism. Fusing and bending styles, Yamashitaâs prose sweeps the reader along with the same manifestos-at-midnight energy that drove the massive cultural changes of the â60s and â70s. Over the years since I first read it, I Hotel has grown in importance to me as a reader, as a bookseller, as a writer, and as a citizen. It is an absolute masterpiece of twenty-first century American literature.â âJosh Cook
â[I Hotel is] one of my favorite books of all time.â âJeff VanderMeer
âI Hotel is an explosive site, a profound metaphor and jazzy, epic novel rolled into one. Karen Tei Yamashita chronicles the colliding arts and social movements in the Bay Area of the wayward â70s with fierce intelligence, humor, and empathy.â âJessica Hagedorn
âIf you were there in 1970s San Francisco, then this book is about you. At some point in reading I Hotel, I lost all objectivity. I wept, I laughed, I read silently while moving my lips. And I read the last twelve pages again and again as if an ancestor had written them.â âShawn Wong
âA multiform swirl of a novel about a decade in the life of San Franciscoâs Chinatown and, by extension, the Asian experience in America. . . . With delightful plays of voice and structure, this is literary fiction at an adventurous, experimental high point.â âKirkus
âThis is an ambitious epic novel. . . . Stylistically innovative, vertiginous, and sweeping, this novel achieves a miraculous blend of fact and fiction and animates an epoch when individuals tried in vain to dissolve their personalities in the rhetoric of revolutionary idealism.â â2010 National Book Award Judgesâ Citation
âThis is such a wonderful book. If you read Thomas Pynchon or you read David Foster Wallace, or any of those post-modern novels, this is the book you need to read.â âMPR News
âAs original as it is political, as hilarious as it is heartbreaking, I Hotel is the result of a decade of research and writing that included more than 150 personal interviews. . . . [and] will be dog-eared and underlined and assigned to college reading lists for generations. . . . In the end, the way I Hotel accounts for the Asian American movement is both sweet and sour. And for all the losses Yamashita records, there are, we know, great achievements as well. High among them is this beautiful book.â âWashington Post Book World
âBrilliant. . . . [Yamashitaâs] ambition is achieved with efficiency, showmanship and wit. . . . A surgically deft depiction of the political entwined with the personal. . . . Yamashitaâs book recalls what art is for: âTo resist death and dementia . . . To kiss . . . you good-bye, leaving the indelible spit of our DNA on still moist lips. Sweet. Sour. Salty. Bitter.â In other words, I Hotelâââs complex taste lingers and haunts, like something alive.â âStar Tribune
âYamashita captures the fiery righteousnessâand self-righteousnessâof the civil-rights movement. . . . The complexity of the era that led to the birth of Asian America. Itâs a glorious tone poem, a rich reminder of the multicultural, multifaceted past from which our city grows.â âSan Francisco Magazine
âItâs a stylistically wild ride, but itâs smart, funny and entrancing.â âMichael Schaub, NPR
âThe breadth of I Hotelâââs embrace is encyclopedic and its effect is kaleidoscopic. It wants to inform and dazzle us on the confusions and conclusions on the question of culture and assimilation.â âChicago Tribune
â[Yamashitaâs] novel is breathtaking in its scope and its energy and innovation make it a good fit with the exciting and transformative time period that it covers. . . . I Hotel demonstrates how complicated and finally irreducible history isâthe many voices and perspectives it comprises, the divergent and winding paths it takes, the way it confounds conventional narrative. Yamashita celebrates this complexity, and sheâs such a deft storyteller that youâll end up celebrating it with her.â âWomenâs Review of Books
âMagnificent. . . . Intriguing.â âLibrary Journal
âI Hotel is an amazing literary accomplishment and one of the most pleasurable reading experiences I have ever had. I believe it stands on the same plane of accomplishment as Roberto Bolañoâs Savage Detectives and Edward P. Jonesâs The Known Worldâan amazing literary accomplishment and a brave and bold act of publishing.â âPaul Yamazaki, City Lights Booksellers
âI Hotel by Karen Tei Yamashita is the kind of book that changed the way I think about what books are capable of. Itâs a peopleâs history, an activistâs archive, a remembrance of time and place, and a powerful reminder that our assumptions about literature ought to be upended from time to time. It is not hyperbole to assert that I Hotel is unlike anything I have ever read. One of the most challenging and rewarding books, and an all-time favorite of mine.â âMatt Keliher, Subtext Books
âI Hotel is at once heartrending and hilarious, both political and personal. And perhaps most thankfully, the writing is wicked smart without a drop of pretentiousness. Filled with pages that take big risks, I Hotel opens up new possibilities, not just for Asian American literature but also for contemporary fiction in general.â âNami Mun, Asian American Literary Awards Judgesâ Citation
âHuge, messy, and frantically fun, I Hotel offers a very believable panorama of life at this time. . . . The portraits of these early generation Asian Americans . . . are quite moving and conveyed without sentimentality. Itâs an impressive accomplishment from an author who continues to push the boundaries of innovative fiction.â âRain Taxi
âOne of the the things that is so amazing about Karen Tei Yamashitaâs most recent novel, I Hotel, is that she not only retrieves the sad beauty of a particularly fraught period of a particularly squalid communityâAsian Americans in San Francisco during the 1960s-70sâbut that she does so in a way that is also exhilarating, celebratory. . . . Which is why we need novels like I Hotel: to patiently help the world remember itself.â âAmerican Book Review
âI Hotel is arguably the best book published on Asian American literary history.â âThe International Examiner
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Description
A novel by Karen Tei Yamashita, introduction by Jessica Hagedorn
October 8, 2019 âąÂ 6 x 9 âąÂ 648 pages ⹠978-1-56689-545-3
Â
An epic journey through one of Americaâs most transformative decades via the stories of the activists, laborers, and students who shaped it.
Dazzling and ambitious, this multivoiced fusion of prose, playwriting, graphic art, and philosophy spins an epic tale of Americaâs struggle for civil rights as it played out in San Francisco near the end of the 1960s. As Karen Tei Yamashitaâs motley cast of students, laborers, artists, revolutionaries, and provocateurs make their way through the history of the day, they become caught in a riptide of politics and passion, clashing ideologies, and personal turmoil.
The tenth anniversary edition of this National Book Award finalist brings the joys and struggles of the I Hotel to a whole new generation of readers, historians, and activists.
About the Author
Karen Tei Yamashita is the author of Letters to Memory, Through the Arc of the Rain Forest, Brazil-Maru, Tropic of Orange, Circle K Cycles, National Book Award finalist I Hotel, and Anime Wong. She has been a U.S. Artists Ford Foundation Fellow and co-holder of the University of California Presidential Chair for Feminist Critical Race and Ethnic Studies. She is Professor Emeritus of Literature and Creative Writing at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Praise for I Hotel
2010 National Book Award Finalist
2011 American Book Award Winner
2010 California Book Award Winner
2011 Asian American Literary Award Fiction Finalist
2011 Asian American Literary Award Membersâ Choice Winner
2011 Asian/Pacific American Library Association (APALA) Book Award Winner in Adult Fiction
Entropy, âBest of 2019â
âStunningly complete. . . . Yamashita accomplishes a dynamic feat of mimesis by throwing together achingly personal stories of lovers, old men, and orphaned children; able synopses of historical events and social upheaval . . . This powerful, deeply felt, and impeccably researched fiction is irresistibly evocative.â âPublishers Weekly, starred review
âExuberant, irreverent, passionately researched . . . Yamashitaâs colossal novel of the dawn of Asian American culture is the literary equivalent of an intricate and vibrant street mural depicting a clamorous and righteous era of protest and creativity.â âBooklist, starred review
âThe extraordinary testimony of a revolutionary past. . . . I Hotel is crammed with detail, with real-life pamphlets, speeches, quotes, and news reports humming and crackling in the background. The whole thing makes for an astonishing, and carefully structured, collage of both local and global movement.â âThe Nation
âI Hotel is a brilliant, vibrantly written exploration of politics, identity, radicalism, and activism. Fusing and bending styles, Yamashitaâs prose sweeps the reader along with the same manifestos-at-midnight energy that drove the massive cultural changes of the â60s and â70s. Over the years since I first read it, I Hotel has grown in importance to me as a reader, as a bookseller, as a writer, and as a citizen. It is an absolute masterpiece of twenty-first century American literature.â âJosh Cook
â[I Hotel is] one of my favorite books of all time.â âJeff VanderMeer
âI Hotel is an explosive site, a profound metaphor and jazzy, epic novel rolled into one. Karen Tei Yamashita chronicles the colliding arts and social movements in the Bay Area of the wayward â70s with fierce intelligence, humor, and empathy.â âJessica Hagedorn
âIf you were there in 1970s San Francisco, then this book is about you. At some point in reading I Hotel, I lost all objectivity. I wept, I laughed, I read silently while moving my lips. And I read the last twelve pages again and again as if an ancestor had written them.â âShawn Wong
âA multiform swirl of a novel about a decade in the life of San Franciscoâs Chinatown and, by extension, the Asian experience in America. . . . With delightful plays of voice and structure, this is literary fiction at an adventurous, experimental high point.â âKirkus
âThis is an ambitious epic novel. . . . Stylistically innovative, vertiginous, and sweeping, this novel achieves a miraculous blend of fact and fiction and animates an epoch when individuals tried in vain to dissolve their personalities in the rhetoric of revolutionary idealism.â â2010 National Book Award Judgesâ Citation
âThis is such a wonderful book. If you read Thomas Pynchon or you read David Foster Wallace, or any of those post-modern novels, this is the book you need to read.â âMPR News
âAs original as it is political, as hilarious as it is heartbreaking, I Hotel is the result of a decade of research and writing that included more than 150 personal interviews. . . . [and] will be dog-eared and underlined and assigned to college reading lists for generations. . . . In the end, the way I Hotel accounts for the Asian American movement is both sweet and sour. And for all the losses Yamashita records, there are, we know, great achievements as well. High among them is this beautiful book.â âWashington Post Book World
âBrilliant. . . . [Yamashitaâs] ambition is achieved with efficiency, showmanship and wit. . . . A surgically deft depiction of the political entwined with the personal. . . . Yamashitaâs book recalls what art is for: âTo resist death and dementia . . . To kiss . . . you good-bye, leaving the indelible spit of our DNA on still moist lips. Sweet. Sour. Salty. Bitter.â In other words, I Hotelâââs complex taste lingers and haunts, like something alive.â âStar Tribune
âYamashita captures the fiery righteousnessâand self-righteousnessâof the civil-rights movement. . . . The complexity of the era that led to the birth of Asian America. Itâs a glorious tone poem, a rich reminder of the multicultural, multifaceted past from which our city grows.â âSan Francisco Magazine
âItâs a stylistically wild ride, but itâs smart, funny and entrancing.â âMichael Schaub, NPR
âThe breadth of I Hotelâââs embrace is encyclopedic and its effect is kaleidoscopic. It wants to inform and dazzle us on the confusions and conclusions on the question of culture and assimilation.â âChicago Tribune
â[Yamashitaâs] novel is breathtaking in its scope and its energy and innovation make it a good fit with the exciting and transformative time period that it covers. . . . I Hotel demonstrates how complicated and finally irreducible history isâthe many voices and perspectives it comprises, the divergent and winding paths it takes, the way it confounds conventional narrative. Yamashita celebrates this complexity, and sheâs such a deft storyteller that youâll end up celebrating it with her.â âWomenâs Review of Books
âMagnificent. . . . Intriguing.â âLibrary Journal
âI Hotel is an amazing literary accomplishment and one of the most pleasurable reading experiences I have ever had. I believe it stands on the same plane of accomplishment as Roberto Bolañoâs Savage Detectives and Edward P. Jonesâs The Known Worldâan amazing literary accomplishment and a brave and bold act of publishing.â âPaul Yamazaki, City Lights Booksellers
âI Hotel by Karen Tei Yamashita is the kind of book that changed the way I think about what books are capable of. Itâs a peopleâs history, an activistâs archive, a remembrance of time and place, and a powerful reminder that our assumptions about literature ought to be upended from time to time. It is not hyperbole to assert that I Hotel is unlike anything I have ever read. One of the most challenging and rewarding books, and an all-time favorite of mine.â âMatt Keliher, Subtext Books
âI Hotel is at once heartrending and hilarious, both political and personal. And perhaps most thankfully, the writing is wicked smart without a drop of pretentiousness. Filled with pages that take big risks, I Hotel opens up new possibilities, not just for Asian American literature but also for contemporary fiction in general.â âNami Mun, Asian American Literary Awards Judgesâ Citation
âHuge, messy, and frantically fun, I Hotel offers a very believable panorama of life at this time. . . . The portraits of these early generation Asian Americans . . . are quite moving and conveyed without sentimentality. Itâs an impressive accomplishment from an author who continues to push the boundaries of innovative fiction.â âRain Taxi
âOne of the the things that is so amazing about Karen Tei Yamashitaâs most recent novel, I Hotel, is that she not only retrieves the sad beauty of a particularly fraught period of a particularly squalid communityâAsian Americans in San Francisco during the 1960s-70sâbut that she does so in a way that is also exhilarating, celebratory. . . . Which is why we need novels like I Hotel: to patiently help the world remember itself.â âAmerican Book Review
âI Hotel is arguably the best book published on Asian American literary history.â âThe International Examiner
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