When Covid-19 erupted into Washington state in 2020, I wondered with anxiety, “Will I get it?” After 26 months, the question remains.
Book recommendations: LGBTQ folks saving the day
In Godolia, tyranny runs rampant, thanks to the giant mechanized weapons, known as Windups, aiding the rulers.
BLOG: Frank Irigon: The fighter and father
The recipient of the UW Charles E. Odegaard Award was Frank Irigon last month. Along with his friends, Irigon had fought UW hard not just once, but thrice, against its policies, systems, and assumptions.
WAYNE’S WORLDS: A time to laugh, but no, not today
To be honest, I’d rather be writing about how the laundry detergent pods keep disappearing from our laundry room.
BLOG: Why I reject Asian cultural values
When you read that headline, you probably thought, “Is she crazy? What is she thinking?”
A life of crime is not for everyone
A year after the death of her best friend Trina Low, Najwa Bakri enters her first Scrabble competition in the hopes of healing and moving on with her life.
BLOG: Moms , LOVE yourself first
A mother’s health is the best gift for her family.
Watari and Wu’s new picture book inspired by daughters
As a young girl in the 1980s, Korey Watari could not find books with characters who looked like her.
BLOG: Oak Tin celebrates buying another Chinatown property and more
The Year of the Tiger may belong to the Gee How Oak Tin family association, representing members with last names of Chin, Chan, Chen, Tran, Woo, and Yuen. It’s Seattle’s only Chinese family association so far, able to host a Lunar New Year community banquet on April 24, even though it has long passed since Feb. 1, the first day of the lunar calendar.
Review: The satirical absurdity of Chou’s ‘Disorientation’
Ingrid Yang’s future is laid out cleanly before her: Get her Ph.D., marry her fiancé, get a tenure-track teaching job and eventually retire and die of old age.
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