Sponsored
Ungrateful Immigrant Daughter - by Katya Suvorova
Pre-order
Sponsored
About this item
Highlights
- In this darkly funny and irreverent memoir, the daughter of a mail-order bride unpacks her undocumented childhood in America.
- About the Author: Katya Suvorova (she/her) was raised as an undocumented Russian immigrant in Texas.
- 320 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Personal Memoirs
Description
Book Synopsis
In this darkly funny and irreverent memoir, the daughter of a mail-order bride unpacks her undocumented childhood in America.
The perfect read for fans of the jaw-dropping twists of 90 Day Fiancé and the emotional gut punch of I'm Glad My Mom Died.
Growing up undocumented in Houston, Texas, Katya Suvorova learned that keeping her family together meant dodging the police, enduring her mother's many husbands, and baby-sitting her younger sister instead of finishing the third grade.
Her understanding of her life shifted dramatically at seventeen, when Katya discovered her mother's advertisement in a forgotten Eastern European mail-order bride catalogue from the 1990s. As she grew older, Katya came to better understand what her mother had risked when she smuggled herself and her then three-year-old daughter from Russia into the US.
When your parents sacrifice their lives so yours can be better, to whom do you owe your future?
Ungrateful Immigrant Daughter explores difficult questions and stories both shocking and hilarious across Katya's childhood through to an adulthood estranged from the woman who sacrificed everything for her. Her sharp, dry wit engages readers in a deeply relatable take on the experience of being a child of immigrants and unraveling a landscape of family secrets and lies, sharing her unique story of being the undocumented daughter of a mail-order bride.
About the Author
Katya Suvorova (she/her) was raised as an undocumented Russian immigrant in Texas. Now a US citizen, she writes in Seattle with the help of her cat--who earned a no-fly list spot the hard way--her 3-legged dog, Spoon, and her husband, who was her 9th grade nemesis.