Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets, & Advice for Living Your Best Life
by Ali Wong, Justin Hakuta
About This Book
Ali Wong wrote Dear Girls as a series of letters to her daughters — part confession, part survival guide, part love letter from a woman who figured things out the hard way and wants to spare them the trouble. She covers the messy, unglamorous realities of dating, ambition, Asian-American identity, and what it actually takes to build a career and a marriage simultaneously. The result is something rarer than a memoir: an honest reckoning with how a life gets made, written by someone with no interest in making it look easy.
What sets the book apart is Wong's voice — caustic and warm in the same breath, with the comic timing of someone who has spent years calibrating exactly how much truth an audience can take before they need a laugh. The letter format gives her permission to be both advice-giver and unreliable narrator, and she uses that tension well. She's funnier on the page than most comedians are on stage, but the humor consistently lands on something real. Readers who expect a breezy celebrity book will find themselves surprised by how much it sticks.