Mbue came to the United States in 1998 to study business management as an undergraduate student at
Rutgers University. After graduating in 2002, she went on to complete her M.A. from
Columbia University, in 2006. She began to work in the corporate sector in New York City, but lost her job as did millions of Americans during the
Great Recession. In 2014, she signed a million-dollar deal with
Random House for her debut book
Behold the Dreamers, which was published in 2016. The novel garnered critical acclaim for, according to
NPR, the way it "depicts a country both blessed and doomed, on top of the world, but always at risk of losing its balance. It is, in other words, quintessentially American." According to the
Washington Posts
Ron Charles, as the book's release coincided with the
2016 presidential election, paired with the "anti-immigrant" rhetoric that was brought to light by candidates and their supporters, the novel brought to light the "vast bureaucracy designed to wall off the American Dream from outsiders". In 2017, the novel was selected by
Oprah Winfrey for
her book club. Mbue is a contributor to the anthology
New Daughters of Africa (edited by
Margaret Busby, 2019). ==Bibliography==