USA TODAY US Edition

These debuts will transport you

4 books by female Asian-American authors.

- Grace Z. Li

This summer brings electric debuts from four Asian-American women whose fiction transcends both time and place, traveling from San Francisco’s Chinatown to a dystopian world set in the remains of New Orleans. USA TODAY explains why all four should be on your reading list.

If You Leave Me By Crystal Hana Kim William Morrow, 432 pp.

Crystal Hana Kim seamlessly maneuvers between narrators in this intergener­ational saga about the Korean War of the 1950s and the lives caught in it. Our first storytelle­r is Haemi, who sets aside her defiant nature and love for her childhood best friend Kyunghwan to marry his cousin, Jisoo. Jisoo promises financial safety for Haemi and her sickly brother, a difficult guarantee to make in wartime. Kim follows this family through the years with heartrendi­ng prose, detailing the anguish of starcrosse­d love and familial duty. “If You Leave Me” is a story about how insidious war can be, how it can continue to fracture a family a generation after the fighting. It’s a stunning feat of lyricism, an enthrallin­g, tragic novel brimming with angst and remorse.

A River of Stars By Vanessa Hua Ballantine, 304 pp.

There’s no telling what Scarlett Chen will do next. The quick-witted heroine of “A River of Stars” steals a van to escape from the luxurious, L.A.-based maternity center where dozens of pregnant Chinese women, hooked on the promise of American citizenshi­p for their unborn children, await C-sections thousand of miles from their native country. Reluctant to let her fate be decided by her exboss-turned-lover, Scarlett runs away with another soon-to-be mother, Daisy, with gas in the tank and their hearts set on San Francisco. Though a little directionl­ess at times, Vanessa Hua’s story spins with wild fervor, with charming protagonis­ts fiercely motivated by maternal and survival instincts. “A River of Stars” is a migrant narrative tenderly constructe­d around Scarlett’s quest to carve a life for her daughter and herself at the risk of deportatio­n.

The Book of M By Peng Shepherd William Morrow, 485 pp.

This is an apocalypti­c thriller with heart. “The Book of M” tracks the tormenting effects of a global phenomenon that blurs the lines between magic and science. One day, a man in a market in India loses his shadow, and soon, his memory with it. Very quickly, more and more follow, and entire countries collapse as the new “shadowless” forget their families, their names and their ability to perform basic functions, such as eating. Author Peng Shepherd examines the lengths afflicted loved ones will go to stay together – or split apart. “The Book of M” is devastatin­g and inventive as Shepherd examines the value of memory, packing in imaginativ­e twists as she goes.

“Half Gods” By Akil Kumarasamy William Morrow, 205 pp.

The Sri Lankan Civil War (1983-2009) serves as both a backdrop and a catalyst for Akil Kumarasamy’s debut, a short-story collection flooded with inspired detail. Kumarasamy writes with precision, crafting prose that moves with the grace of poetry. Initially, these stories may seem loosely linked, spanning borders and generation­s. We visit an entomologi­st relentless­ly searching for his son, a refugee stunned by violence but anchored by his daughter, and a girl who writes disturbing myths of babies cursed with pencil-thin limbs or reptilian wings – babies destined for sadness. The first story of “Half Gods” centers on two brothers named after demigods. Then the collection moves through time, a testament to Kumarasamy’s talent for finding the most tender spots of the human soul.

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