I am really torn about how to rate Given Away. To begin, I am not a fan of Memoir, I guess that makes me an unfeeling clod.
On another hand, the book is well written. I quite like the style although I think she could use more separators between scene changes, and she does that often. Someone once described this a free flow of consciousness. I have come to be able to follow the form, but I would like to be warned.
I must preface the following with acknowledging I am neither female, Amerasian, nor adopted, so I have little basis for judging Katie/Kate's view of the world, but that shortcoming doesn't prevent me from having an opinion.
While I hate to say it, I never came to like Anny/Katie/Kate. I found her to be broken and blaming everyone except herself for the injuries she visited upon herself. That said, she did have a difficult life to live. She should have kicked the old guy that molested her in the balls, and then reported him to the police. I think it was unfortunate, actually unforgivable, that her American mom encouraged her to let it go. I was very angry, but not surprised, by the reaction of the "good Texas Christians" had to her as well as the potential mother-in-law who didn't want her grandchildren to look like her. I guess I shouldn't be surprised that, apparently, Korean's have the same inbred bigotry as to half-breeds as to the afore mentioned Texans.
Although the book covered much of her life and the revelations of why she was put up for adoption, eventually, I think she could have used another few pages to explain that the visit healed her life with some examples. Although I guess it did in a way.
I think that the entire first half of the book feels more like something that should be discussed with her therapist or priest, but not published. It really isn't something that the world needs to know. Reading her account of her life just made this reader angry. Perhaps someone who is a memoir fan will think of it differently.