The Chinese Groove. By Kathryn Ma. 2022. Counterpoint.
Bullied by his own family, 18-year-old Shelley is sent “away from this unhappy life and into a brighter world.” Relying on the titular Chinese groove that links even strangers as long as backgrounds overlap, Shelley lands in San Francisco to start anew with a “conveniently rich” uncle (who’s not). Shelley prevails, often aided by strangers, through English classes, boarding-house woes, homelessness, elder-, child-, and dog-care, app development, and more. By reconnecting broken bonds, Shelley attains the “Three Achievables … Family, Love, Fortune.”
Days at the Morisaki Bookshop. By Satoshi Yagisawa. Tr. by Eric Ozawa. 2023. HarperPerennial.
When Uncle Satoru offers to let Takako stay at the family bookshop after a debilitating breakup in exchange for opening the store in the mornings, she…