Amy Chua Books

Amy Chua and her husband Jed Rubenfeld are professors at Yale Law School as well as published authors. Chua penned the controversial internationally bestselling parenting book, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother and Rubenfeld has written two mystery novels.

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1
 Books: The Triple Package by Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld

The Triple Package

Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld
How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America
3.7 (12 ratings)
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What's The Triple Package about?

The Triple Package (2014) is a sweeping account of the rise and fall of different cultural groups in America. These blinks explain the traits essential to success, how they are at odds with American values and the unintended side effects they often have.

Who should read The Triple Package?

  • Anyone interested in the logic of success
  • People who want to know why some groups excel above others
  • Fans of cultural theories

2
 Books: Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua

Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother

Amy Chua
3.7 (84 ratings)
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What's Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother about?

Amy Chua was born in the United States to strict Chinese immigrant parents who pushed her to work hard and succeed instead of coddling and encouraging her. Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother (2011) is about her experience of raising her third-generation kids according to her parents’ old-school beliefs. Chua offers not only an insightful and often controversial take on parenting, but also a memoir of a very stern yet loving tiger mother.

Who should read Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother?

  • People who work with children – and their parents
  • Parents who are curious about non-Western child-raising methods
  • Anybody interested in an unusual family memoir

3
 Books: Political Tribes by Amy Chua

Political Tribes

Amy Chua
Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations
4.2 (34 ratings)
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What's Political Tribes about?

Political Tribes (2018) is an insightful study of one of today’s most pressing issues: tribalism. From postwar Iraq to Chavez’s Venezuela and Trump’s America, political life has become increasingly polarized. That’s a problem. Once people stop trying to understand each other and retreat into the safety of their own tribes, conflict becomes inevitable. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Amy Chua argues that foreign and domestic policy can defuse tensions as long as those policies are based on a sound understanding of tribalism.

Who should read Political Tribes?

  • Anyone who’s wondered what exactly went wrong in Iraq
  • Citizens tired of endless political partisanship
  • Fans of penetrating social analysis