https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBBhLbDtEmM
.Love Imagined is an American woman’s unique struggle for identity.
“Joining the long history of women of color fighting to claim literary space to tell our stories, Sherry Quan Lee shares her truth with fierce courage and strength in Love Imagined. … Quan Lee crafts a riveting tale of Minnesota life set within the backdrop of racial segregation, the Cold War, the sexual revolution while navigating it all through the lens of her multi-layered identities. A true demonstration of the power of an intersectional perspective.”
–Kandace Creel Falcón, Ph.D., Director of Women’s and Gender Studies, Minnesota State University, Moorhead
“Love Imagined: this fascinating, delightful, important book. This imagining love, this longing for love. This poverty of No Love, this persistent racism, sexism, classism, ageism. The pain these evils cause the soul…This is an important document of a mixed-race contemporary woman, a memoir about her family lineages back to slavery, back to China, back to early Minneapolis, and about the struggle of finding herself in all of these.”
–Sharon Doubiago, author of My Father’s Love
“When I read Sherry’s story [Love Imagined], I recognized feelings and meanings that mirrored mine. I felt a sense of release, an exhale, and I knew I could be understood by her in a way that some of my family and friends are unable to grasp, through no fault of their own. It’s the Mixed experience. Sherry Lee’s voice, her story, will no doubt touch and heal many who read it.”
–Lola Osunkoya, MA Founder of Neither/Both LLC, Mixed-Race Community Building and Counseling
Learn more at www.SherryQuanLee.com
From Modern History Press www.ModernHistoryPress.com
BIO002000 Biography & Autobiography: Cultural Heritage
SOC028000 Social Science: Women’s Studies – General
SOC043000 Social Science: Ethnic Studies – Asian American Studies
Sherry, after 45 years you are still untouched! What a wonderful way to be. I enjoyed your reading. You can be sure of one thing, your dad is Chinese-born. I knew you mother and met much of your family in the late sixties and early seventies. They are living testament to who you are. Continue to “Wonder”, it is a journey I briefly shared with you and which should never end!