Elizabeth Wong's "Letters to a Student Revolutionary," is a striking piece of work that focuses on a fictional relationship between a Chinese girl, Karen, and an American citizen, Bibi. The latter meets her counterpart when she goes vacationing in Beijing, China, and a chronic correspondence ensues between the duo. This play adopts a milieu in which Karen envies her friend Bibi in all manner of circumstances and measures, and goes ahead to adopt a fake American name so as to emulate everything that is western. By all means, the Chinese-born character views her American friend as a being freshly from paradise, from the mere fact that her origins can be traced to America. In this regard, Bibi returns the unmistakable admiration with hidden dislike, considering Karen as a total pest who is merely using her to secure her U.S. ticket. This can be evidenced in the following passage: Karen: I am thinking to accept your invitation to come to live with you in California. Charlie: Ooops! Bibib: Bingo! Karen: Perhaps you, Bibi, will pay $10,000 for my airplane ticket and my living in California. Once I get to live in California, I will work and work and work and pay you back. Does this make sense? What do you think of my idea? I know this letter is my first letter to you and I am asking you for bringing an... (Wong 19). The play serves to demonstrate various circumstances that happen in everyday life of most youths. For instance, it clearly describes the common trend that most people use to gain access to the developed countries, that of developing a close relationship with a citizen of the coveted nation. It is right for Bibi to subsume that Karen is merely a pet, who yearns to simply hang on her coat until she gets a visa to the United States. More interestingly, Wong succeeds in demonstrating the power of determination, when the undying spirit of Karen bears pragmatic fruits at last. It is mentioned that as Bibi focuses her energy and atte