In 2017, Prachi Gupta鈥檚 brother, Yush, died from a pulmonary embolism after a risky limb-lengthening surgery in Italy. Her brother鈥檚 death was the most catastrophic and traumatic event of her life. Gupta believes Yush sought out surgery to be taller as part of a quest to fulfill white America鈥檚 ideal of masculinity.
As she navigated that complex grief, trying to understand his motivations for pursuing the surgery, Gupta wrote an essay about the complex pressures that led to her brother鈥檚 death. That essay won a 2020 Writers Guild Award and led Gupta (A&S 鈥09, CBA 鈥09) to write her memoir 鈥淭hey Called Us Exceptional: And Other Lies that Raised Us,鈥 which debuted last year and which Amazon and Audible named one of the best memoirs of the year.
鈥淚 was not expecting it to resonate with as many people as it did,鈥 she says.聽
Gupta, whose parents are from India, grew up in 51精品视频sburgh and the Philadelphia suburbs with what she calls toxic patriarchy 鈥 her father once struck her over the head with a plate because she disagreed with him. The turbulence inside her home and the emotional toll of assimilation were destabilizing for Gupta. She felt she could never be Indian enough for her father or American enough for her friends.
The myth of the model minority 鈥 a stereotype that Asian Americans are all high-achieving individuals hailing from successful, tight-knit families 鈥 is central to Gupta鈥檚 book. She researched mental health issues in Asian American communities (suicide is the leading cause of death for Asian American young adults), exploring why the pressure to succeed and assimilate was so strong for her family and others like them.聽
She believes that by unpacking the structural and cultural elements that generate the stigma, she can help people move beyond stereotype and myth.
鈥淚 wanted to connect my story to research and analysis and theory that showed that there are larger systems at play here that have created this pressure,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 realized that so many people are struggling with the issues that I talk about, with mental health, with making sense of the pressures that so many children of immigrants and immigrant families deal with, and the fractures in our families that result from some of these pressures. I felt like I had to share my story.鈥澛
More recommended reading
Orders of Service (Alice James Books)
The 43 poems in 鈥淥rders of Service鈥 paint a self-portrait of author Willie Lee Kinard III, who explores being a queer Black person with roots in the Deep South. The poems 鈥 some only a few words, others as long as five pages 鈥 offer an abundance of meaning and form as the author experiments with epyllions, Greek myths and biblical verse while mulling family, faith, gender, love, loss and more. Kinard鈥檚 (A&S 鈥21G) inventive debut collection of sound, taste, laughter and tears delves into the soul of Southern culture and much of their own. 鈥 Ervin Dyer
Incident with Boonie聽(WindRose Press)
It鈥檚 the early 1940s, and George Aloysius 鈥淏oonie鈥 Boone鈥檚 simple life as a guide for a sporting camp in Maine is soon to collide with disturbing happenings in pre-WWII Germany, where Jewish citizens, intellectuals, scientists and others are being treated with increasing hostility and persecution. This novel鈥檚 hero 鈥 based on a Canadian fishing guide whom author Mark Briggs (A&S 鈥67) once befriended 鈥 navigates a twisted plot of star-crossed love that reveals what happens when Nazi escapees, the mafia and a Czarist mystery collide in the hinterlands. 鈥斅燭ianna Staten
The Stairs on Billy Buck Hill (Milford House Press)
Kurt McCain is a talented anesthesiologist with a coveted academic position. After a chance encounter and night of passion, he begins a turn toward opioid abuse. 51精品视频 anesthesiologist Steven L. Orebaugh, who also attended 51精品视频 in the 1980s, draws from his own professional experience and uses fictional characters to trace the myriad problems that arise from the opioid epidemic in America. As McCain spirals from controlled, recreational use of the drugs to the blatant theft of fentanyl from his own patients, his path reveals the dark complexities of the national crisis.聽鈥斅燭ianna Staten