An answer to Amy Chua's Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, author Kim Wong Keltner's Tiger Babies Strike Back takes the control-freak beast by the tail with a humorous and honest look at the issues facing women today-Chinese-American and otherwise.
Keltner, the author of the novels Buddha Baby and I Want Candy, mines her own past in an attempt to dispel the myth that all Chinese women are Tiger Mothers. Keltner strikes back at Chua's argument through topics, including "East Meets West in the Board Room and the Bedroom," and "I Was Raised by a Tiger Mom and All I Got Was this Lousy T-Shirt: A Rebuttal to Chua."
Through personal anecdotes and tough-love advice, Keltner's witty and forthright opinions evoke an Asian-American Sex and the City, while showing how our families shape our personal worlds.
What happens when the children of Tiger Moms grow up and decide they’re not going to take it anymore?
- A Rebuttal to the Tiger Mom: Tired of feeling kicked around? Keltner takes on Amy Chua’s controversial book with wit, humor, and the perspective of someone who survived a “control-freaky” upbringing.
- Sharp Cultural Commentary: Explore what it really means to be a Chinese American woman today—from the boardroom to the bedroom, and beyond the myth of the model minority.
- Generational Differences: With tough-love advice and hilarious honesty, this book bridges the gap between obedient daughters and their often-critical parents.
- A Modern Asian American Voice: Discover a perspective that’s been called an “Asian-American Sex and the City,” navigating family, identity, and motherhood with refreshing candor.
Kim Wong Keltner is a Tiger Baby all grown up with a daughter of her own . . . but is she a Tiger Mother? Heck, no. This book describes—in hilarious, and sometimes heartbreaking, detail—exactly why not.
A battle hymn for every non-Tiger offspring of Tiger parents, Tiger Babies Strike Back examines why generations of kids have been made to feel inferior, isolated, suffocated, and humiliated in dogged pursuit of one goal: making their elders look good. In search of answers, Keltner delves into her own childhood, family history, and community traditions to expose the seamy underbelly of perfectionistic parenting. Can the Tiger-parented take back their emotional lives and love their own kids unconditionally? Keltner herself is living, hugging, fabulously flawed, Care Bear tea-party-throwing proof that they can.
Traversing the choppy seas of American and Chinese traditions, Keltner dives into the difficulties facing women today—Chinese American and otherwise. At once deeply relevant and playfully honest, Tiger Babies Strike Back combines personal anecdotes and tough love advice for a humorous, provocative look at how our families shape—and sometimes shake—our personal foundations.
It's awesome to find such deep truth that makes you laugh this hard.