It’s entertaining, it’s pensive, and most importantly, it opens space—for calm, for identity, for trusting the child and trusting yourself.
Sebastian Sim has crafted a book that is sharp, smart, and indispensable.
Frances Cha has written a book that sparkles, that pierces, that holds up a mirror—not just to Seoul, not just to women in that world, but to all of us in worlds of expectation, performance and ambition.
Few books manage to shift both personal perspective and institutional conversation. This is exhaustively researched and sharply written.
If you’re searching for a read that lingers, that feels both intimate and wide in its reach, this is absolutely the one to pick up.
This is Taylor Jenkins Reid at her most introspective & honest — an exploration of what it truly means to commit, to question, and to decide.
Dana Schwartz has crafted a novel that cuts into history, pulls out the pulse of ambition, and stitches it into something unforgettable.
Elle Cosimano has crafted a debut that’s equal parts witty caper and emotional rescue mission.
Karina Robles Bahrin has given us not just a fresh debut but a story that’s relevant beyond one country, one business, one identity.
We Were Dreamers goes beyond memoir. It becomes manifesto—of migration, of ambition, of choosing yourself when the world expects something else.