"Lee's keen eye for class concerns and her confident, muscular writing about the conflicting pulls toward one's cultural heritage and the unknowable, wide- open future make this book a pleasure."--Meg Wolitzer, New York Times bestselling author of The Interestings
"Engrossing and illuminating . . . a panoramic portrait of contemporary Korean Americans and their 'white boy' colleagues, lovers, and friends."--Alix Kates Shulman, author of Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen and Drinking the Rain
"Unfolds in New York in the 1990s with an energetic eventfulness and a sprawling cast that call to mind the literary classics of Victorian England . . . It would be remarkable if she had simply written a long novel that was as easy to devour as a nineteenth-century romance--packed with tales of flouted parental expectations, fluctuating female friendships and rivalries, ephemeral (and longer-lasting) romantic hopes and losses, and high-stakes career gambles. But Lee intensifies her drama by setting it against an unfamiliar backdrop: the tightly knit social world of Korean immigrants, whose children strive to blend into their American foreground without clashing with their distinctive background. It's a feat of coordination and contrast that could kill a chameleon, but Lee pulls it off with conviction."--New York Times Book Review
"Complex and intriguing . . . an exquisite look at life's uncertainties. The beauty of Lee's novel is that it does not focus solely on Casey's sojourn from naïve pride to self-realization, as compelling as that is."--Associated Press
"An expansive story . . . draws the reader with likeably human, multidimensional characters and a subtly shifting, unpredictable plot."--Washington Post
"A terrific debut novel . . . reminiscent of another ambitious New York novel about class collision, Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities . . . the pleasure of reading this sprawling novel derives from the old-fashioned thrill of watching the wheel of fortune slowly turn for various characters . . . In the Victorian-inflected saga of Casey Han and her friends, Lee has given readers more than just Elizabeth Bennet tricked out in a Korean hanbok, she's tweaked venerable nineteenth-century fictional forms to suit the story of yet another new immigrant group claiming New York City as its own."--Maureen Corrigan, Fresh Air, NPR
"A first-rate read--a book you finish feeling certain the lives inside will go on long after the final page."--People
"A big, juicy, coming-of-age novel . . . definitely belongs in this summer's beach bag."--Entertainment Weekly
"In Lee's deft hands . . . pages pass as effortlessly as time."--BookPage
"Min Jin Lee is incredible at writing from so many different character perspectives with such care for detail that the resulting novel seems both sweeping and contained. In her debut novel, Free Food for Millionaires, she exercised this skill in full force."--Mental Floss
"Mesmerizing...Not since Jhumpa Lahiri's The Namesake has an author so exquisitely evoked what it's like to be an immigrant."--USA Today
"Lee has updated the Victorian novel of progress to a postmodern, postfeminist world and imagined a character whose circumstances feel universal."--Chicago Tribune
"This big, beguiling book has all the distinguishing marks of a Great American novel."--The Times, London