Kat Chow is a writer and a journalist. She was previously a reporter at NPR, where she was a founding member of the Code Switch team. Her work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, and on Radiolab, among others. She's one of Pop Culture Happy Hour's fourth chairs. She's received a residency fellowship from the Millay Colony and was an inaugural recipient of the Yi Dae Up fellowship at the Jack Jones Literary Arts Retreat.
ONE OF AMAZON'S BEST BOOKS OF 2021
ONE OF BARNES AND NOBLES' BEST BOOKS OF 2021
ONE OF BUSINESS INSIDER'S BEST MEMOIRS OF 2021
ONE OF BOOKRIOT'S BEST BOOKS TO GIFT FOR 2021
ONE OF ENTROPY'S BEST NONFICTION BOOKS OF 2020-2021
"Kat Chow's memoir, Seeing Ghosts, is a memorial to her mother
delivered in a graceful, captivating voice. . . Chow exercises such
control that her tone manages somehow to be both brooding and
affectionately humorous."--New York Times Book Review
"Seeing Ghosts is a reminder that love, loss, and hope glide hand
in hand - in this book about family and its bonds, Kat Chow
transforms the question of what it means to lose and still have
love for the mysteries of this world. Chow's writing is by turns
resonant, hilarious, and meticulously researched, making dreams and
feelings that are otherwise invisible potent and wholly tangible.
Chow's scenes paint histories and emotions with the densest of
feeling, as Seeing Ghosts guides us through how a life can be
lived, who is left behind, and how we find ways to come together
despite this. Kat Chow illustrates what it means when we're bound
to one another, excavating what we owe each other alongside what we
owe ourselves. A delight and a miracle - the world is fuller,
stranger, and brighter by this book's presence."
--Bryan Washington, author of Memorial
"Seeing Ghosts is an aching read that will settle in your bones and
wrap itself around your heart."--Bitch Media
"Seeing Ghosts is truly beautiful. A balm. There is such a deep
comfort in Kat Chow's writing, in her remembrance of small things.
It is a love song to loss, to family, to the power of writing
things down and remembering."--Jacqueline Woodson, award-winning
author of Red at the Bone
"Seeing Ghosts spins memories and individuals into entire worlds.
Its strength lies in how it traverses landscapes, physical and
emotional, that plot different moments of Chow's life and maps them
for the reader. Chow spins her memories from herself, and they
become something else entirely -- haunting and beautiful reminders
of the silences we keep stored in ourselves, and the ghosts they
form when we begin to see."--Asia Pacific Arts
"[Seeing Ghosts] could be such a heavy story, but it's got this
marvelous mix of poetry and dry humor. . . The memoir is just so
heartfelt, gorgeously written and rich in detail."--Here and
Now
"[Seeing Ghosts] is a memoir that is not only personal and
heartbreakingly honest, but that digs into the very nature of grief
and what it means to want to preserve those we've lost."--Book
Riot
"[Seeing Ghosts] re-creates the uncanny experience of grief. Each
page finds Chow peeling back the layers that mummify the thing
closest to the truth, brushing away the dust to reveal the bone
beneath."--Washington City Paper
"[An] affecting (and quite funny) meditation on long-term
mourning."--New York Magazine
"[A] deeply felt, indelibly moving memoir. . . This memoir is an
excavation of a family's history, but it's also a reclamation of
sorts, a reminder that our stories stretch out far past the edges
of our own lives, and that there is comfort to be discovered in
their reach, beauty to be found in their embrace."--Refinery29
"[A] vivid portrait of [Chow's] loving and flawed Chinese American
family. The book is a tribute to Chow's spirited mother, but it's
also a revealing portrait of three daughters trying to negotiate a
complicated relationship with their family."--Library Journal
"[B]rilliant. . . [I]n true journalistic form, Chow expands
outward, exploring the broader cultural and political histories
that inform her family's experience of place, love, and
grief."--Shondaland
"[T]his book is more about the complexity of what holds a family
together than the sadness of loss. . . As after sitting down and
having a long talk with a good friend, you'll come away buoyed by
the solidarity of realizing that we all struggle and the comfort
that comes with understanding each other's plights."--Good
Housekeeping
"[U]ndeniably one of the best books you will read this year. . .
Chow has mastered the ability to voice the painful fallout of loss
in all its excruciating detail, capturing the essence of how grief
feels with each event along the way, no matter how small."--The
Nerd Daily
"A beautifully introspective reckoning with death."--South China
Morning Post
"A deeply moving exploration of grief."--Marie Claire
"By uniting family memories, elements of Chinese culture, and an
intimate perspective, Chow wraps tragedy and history into an
affecting memorial. A powerful remembrance of a family unmoored by
the loss of its matriarch."--Kirkus Reviews
"Chow does distill what it feels like to grieve well beyond the
initial shock of death in Seeing Ghosts. . . In writing about her
mother's life and death, and what came before and after, Chow
excavates her history and the ways that distance and longing
refract across generations."--NPR Book Review
"Chow's meditation on loss shows how memories that haunt can also
sustain."--People
"Chow's memoir takes the reader on a journey from China and Hong
Kong to Cuba and America. She reclaims her family's history--and
her own--through this masterpiece of experience."--SheReads
"How do we know our mothers? This seemed to me to be what this
powerful memoir brought into focus for me. From the narrow window
we have of them from childhood, expanding outward as we grow older,
and then after their death, when they cannot keep their secrets
from us, including that also, the result is a prismatic vision of
the mother in these pages, of Chow's mother, but all our mothers.
This is a book that asks us to consider if we allow our mothers to
be human--and ourselves, too. A daring, loving, searing
debut."--Alexander Chee, bestselling author of How to Write an
Autobiographical Novel
"I read Seeing Ghosts with a great sense of luck and relief that
Kat Chow's book shares the ground with the best memoirs: that they
are the archeologists of memory, unearthing places we have wavered
in going. Like all books that haunt us long after reading, Seeing
Ghosts is a courageous act of excavation and salvage. It is also a
feat of rescue and healing."--Ocean Vuong, New York Times
bestselling author of On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
"In Seeing Ghosts, Kat Chow tells a story that is at once intimate
and generous in its welcome, sifting through the legacy of a
formative and profound loss in order to better understand her late
mother, her family, and herself. This gorgeous, thoughtful memoir
has much to offer, including the hard-won truth that sometimes,
moving forward into an uncertain future requires us to revisit,
remember, and attempt to unravel the traumas of our past."--Nicole
Chung, author of All You Can Ever Know: A Memoir
"In carefully arranged pieces, anecdotes laid together like mosaic
tiles, Chow unleashes the power of her own grief after the loss of
her mother. . . The brilliance of Seeing Ghosts is that these
fragments all tie together naturally--readers never pause to ask
why Chow is bringing them under one roof, for they've learned to
trust she'll reveal the connections in time. . . Seeing Ghosts is a
book that will leave readers thinking, mourning, probing the
absences and injustices of American life, equally haunted and
soothed by ghosts."--Shelf Awareness
"Journalist Chow writes longingly about her mother, who died from
cancer, in this intimate debut about a life shaped by loss. . .
While deep emotion drives her writing, Chow generally avoids
oversentimentality and buoys what could otherwise be an
overwhelmingly despondent narrative with bursts of joy and
irreverence. . . The result is a moving depiction of grief at its
most mundane and spectacular."--Publishers Weekly
"Kat Chow dares to explore the lingering dynamics of her family's
shared grief in her breathtaking debut memoir. . . It's a
bittersweet meditation on how losing the ones we love indelibly
shapes the futures of the living, and how we ultimately find
healing in the strength of family."--TIME Magazine
"Kat Chow's memoir tackles a vast topic--grief--and brings it into
focus with a gripping, harrowing personal story. . . Her book is a
touching meditation on what it means to know and remember a loved
one and how we can continue living without losing sight of the
people who have shaped our lives, even after they're gone."--Town &
Country
"Like the experience of grief itself, Seeing Ghosts is meditative,
fragmentary, sometimes funny and occasionally hopeful."
--BookPage
"Readers familiar with Chow's reporting on NPR will not be
surprised at her storytelling skills, which shine even more
brightly here. This haunting, deeply moving, and beautifully
written chronicle of the immense grief that once tore Chow's family
apart and now binds them will resonate with every
reader."--Booklist, starred review
"The book reads like a memory album. . . In baring her memories and
her soul, Chow reminds us why this task is so important, and how it
lets us heal."--USA Today
"Through the lens of loss and generational trauma, Chow develops a
new form of contemplating the American family through three
generations of her own Chinese-American family. The writer's
transition from journalism to memoir isn't to be
missed."--Cultured
"With love and sorrow, Kat Chow's Seeing Ghosts takes up the
daunting, difficult, essential task that falls to the children of
immigrants--that of making visible the family histories that recede
from us like a hazy shoreline, of pulling a lifeline out of the
silence that compounds with acquiescence and loss and time.
Uncertainty remains central and loss ineluctable, despite the
doggedness and perspicacity of Chow's efforts to uncover and
recover; this might be the most human of all the truths in this
beautiful, moving memoir."
--Jia Tolentino, New York Times bestselling author of Trick Mirror
Ask a Question About this Product More... |