Some readers categorize Maxine Hong Kingston as a great Asian-American writer, a classification that is ultimately too narrow for her body of work. However, the subject matter of Kingston's novels and autobiographies espouses the Asian immigrant experience, as the following characters suggest: immigrant laborers in California and Hawaii, railroad laborers, and Chinese doctors. In natural harmony with her choice of subject matter are the personal sensibilities of a first-generation American writer who endeavors to explain her mother's alien sensibility and her relationship with her silent, angry father.
Kingston's Asian influences are present in another type of work, Chinese myths in the guise of "talk stories." A character in her novel Tripmaster Monkey is based on Sun Wu Kong, a mythical Chinese figure. In response to this work, Herbert Gold notes that the author "invigorates her novel with an avid personal perspective, doing what the novel is supposed to do—she brings us the news of the world and makes magic of it."
Consider each of the following answer choices separately and select all that apply.
It can be inferred that Kingston uses “talk stories”
A. to provide an outlet for critiques of her work
B. as a way to present Chinese myths in her stories
C. as a method of engaging children who are not yet reading on their own
The author focuses on the content of Kingston's work primarily to
A. illustrate why one might be tempted to call Kingston an Asian-American author
B. assert whyKingston’s work is difficult to categorize
C. explain whyKingston’s work is thought by many to have universal appeal
D. illustrate how Kingston’s work is affected by her parental influences
E. show what makes Kingston unique among Asian-American writers