In "How Books Can Open Your Mind," which detail supports the central idea that books changed the author's relationship with her family?

• My parents wanted me to become an engineer like them. After surviving the Cultural Revolution, they firmly believed there's only one sure way to happiness: a safe and well-paid job.

• I came to the U.S. in 1995, so which books did I read here first? Books banned in China, of course. The Good Earth is about
Chinese peasant life.

• "Honor," I said. "That's so different, and better, than obey." So it becomes my tool to climb out of this Confucian guilt trap and to restart my relationship with my parents.

The detail that supports the central idea that books changed the author's relationship with her family is: "So it becomes my tool to climb out of this Confucian guilt trap and to restart my relationship with my parents."

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The detail that supports the central idea that books changed the author's relationship with her family is:

- "Honor," I said. "That's so different, and better, than obey." So it becomes my tool to climb out of this Confucian guilt trap and to restart my relationship with my parents.

The detail that supports the central idea that books changed the author's relationship with her family is:

" 'Honor,' I said. 'That's so different, and better, than obey.' So it becomes my tool to climb out of this Confucian guilt trap and to restart my relationship with my parents."

This detail suggests that the author's perspective on honor, which she learned from reading books, allowed her to challenge the traditional expectations placed on her by her parents and see a different way of relating to them. It implies that books helped her redefine her values and communicate with her parents in a more meaningful way.