After Daughters of the Bamboo Grove
The Far Away Brothers by Lauren Markham
If you felt the gut-punch of sisters separated by ideology and borders in Daughters of the Bamboo Grove, you need this next read. It's the same raw examination of family fracture and resilience—twins navigating the U.S. immigration maze with every bureaucratic cruelty landing like personal betrayal. Demick showed you China's one-child policy through separated lives; this exposes how migration doesn't just divide geography, it shatters identity itself.