Michelle Kuo taught English at an alternative school in the Arkansas Delta for two years. After teaching, she attended Harvard Law School as a Paul and Daisy Soros Fellow, and worked legal aid at a nonprofit for Spanish-speaking immigrants in the Fruitvale district of Oakland, California, on a Skadden Fellowship, with a focus on tenants’ and workers’ rights. She has volunteered as a teacher at the Prison University Project and clerked for a federal appeals court judge in the Ninth Circuit. Currently she teaches courses on race, law, and society at the American University in Paris.
“Penetrating, haunting . . . In all of the literature addressing
education, race, poverty, and criminal justice, there has been
nothing quite like Reading with Patrick.”—James Forman, Jr., and
Arthur Evenchik, The Atlantic
“Reading with Patrick could be the most affecting book you’ll read
this year. To experience such a spectrum of responses—from anger to
admiration, disbelief to inspiration, helpless frustration to
stand-up-and-shout-cheering—should be enough impetus to get you
urgently ‘reading with Patrick’ as soon as possible.”—The Christian
Science Monitor
“Three out of four stars!”—USA Today
“Honest, thoughtful, and humane, Kuo’s book is not only a testament
to a remarkable friendship, but a must-read for anyone interested
in social justice and race in America. Thoughtfully provocative
reading.”—Kirkus Reviews
“This memoir of teaching literature in one of the poorest counties
in America is a reminder of how literacy changes lives. Highly
recommended.”—Library Journal (starred review)
“Michelle Kuo’s Reading with Patrick is a strikingly candid and
insightful meditation on the relationship between a young teacher
and a former student as they read together while the student awaits
trial for murder in a Southern jail. Compulsively readable,
the book manages to do two extraordinary things at once: it offers
a poignant and moving account of a specific relationship, and it
grapples searchingly with universal themes around families, race,
poverty, teaching, and the power of literature. The book will
continue to resonate long after you have put it down and returned
to the everyday—this is what the best books, the best teachers,
do.”—Carol S. Steiker, Henry J. Friendly Professor of Law, faculty
co-director of the Criminal Justice Policy Program at Harvard Law
School
“Warmhearted but never sentimental, and acutely self-aware,
Michelle Kuo’s memoir is the most profound, tender, and intensely
moving portrait of a student-teacher relationship I’ve ever read.
It shows how deeply a student and teacher can change each other’s
lives. Kuo knows the complications and the limits of helping, but
she is brave and generous and stubborn enough to do it
anyway.”—Larissa MacFarquhar, author of Strangers Drowning
“This book is special and could not be more right on time. It’s an
absorbing, tender, and surprisingly honest examination of race and
privilege in America that helps articulate what is often lost,
seemingly intentionally, in national debates over criminal justice
and education: the inner life and imagination of a young
person.”—Wes Moore, author of The Other Wes Moore
“Every American should read Michelle Kuo’s remarkable memoir.
Honest, generous, humble, and wise, Reading with Patrick will
endure as a defining story for our times and, abidingly, a
testament to the power of language and of books.”—Claire Messud,
author of The Woman Upstairs
Ask a Question About this Product More... |