I was going to give this book 3 stars, but I see that it has an average of 3.49. It's definitely more than a 3.5, in my opinion.
First, what I didn't like: The author's style consists of lots of little sections: a paragraph or two followed by some blank space, followed by another paragraph or two. As the book progresses, there are longer sections. But it was really hard for me to get into the book; I often use those spaces as a place to take a break and get some work done (work-work, housework, exercise, etc.), but these were insubstantial. I can't for the life of me figure out why the author (or editor?) chose to write in little sound bites. It's annoying. Maybe it made the book long enough that people would want to buy it?
I enjoy fiction from a multicultural perspective, and Jasmine fits the bill perfectly. In the beginning, she's "Jyoti." The name "Jasmine" only comes later, in one of her several personal reinventions.
Jasmine is a survivor in several important ways, which I won't go into (no spoilers here!). It's that survivor mentality that propels her into periodic reinvention, and some of those incarnations are more interesting than others, although not necessarily more believable. But we see that Jasmine isn't necessarily a reliable narrator; in one sentence she'll profess love for somebody, and in the next mere fondness. You sense that she is so determined to survive that she hides a lot from herself. The problem with this first-person narrative, then, is that a lot is hidden from the reader. It takes a master to produce a book in which characters hide a lot from themselves but the reader understands far more than they do about them. Think Kazuo Ishiguro's of The Remains of the Day, an astounding example an unreliable character being "outed" by skillful writing.
Unfortunately, in Jasmine, I never quite understood when the title character's descriptions were remotely accurate, and it was confusing. There were also some parts of the plot that I just didn't fall for (an Iowa farmer/banker who has some sort of revelation and adopts a 14-year-old Vietnamese boy, who immediately starts treating the two main adults in his life as "Mom" and "Dad", in particular).
I would say that for the first third of Jasmine I was pretty sure I wouldn't keep reading, and yet I did, and I'm glad I did. I'm also glad that the ending is somewhat unsure, as it potentially (to me) changes much of what Jasmine has said about herself.
Anyway, this isn't a masterpiece for the ages, but it's skillful and interesting in its portrayal of the title character, as well as other characters. It's also a fantastic commentary on American life (overprivileged New York academics, genuine "do-gooders" who positively change the lives of others, midwestern folks in a small farming community, among others), and how completely clueless we can be, meanwhile happily thinking ourselves to be the gold standard of humanity on this planet. At least Jasmine notices it, and never seems to aspire to that mindset. She's a survivor, who will be a chameleon forever, if necessary, and thus able to look with amused curiosity at obliviously earnest personalities who are sure that theirs is the only way of life that makes sense.