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Loading... Re Jane: A Novel (original 2015; edition 2015)by Patricia Park (Author)
Work InformationRe Jane by Patricia Park (2015)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I was a white American English teacher in Korea, so the portrait of Seoul that Patricia Park draws made me nostalgic. This is a rich, charming literary pastiche that looks at Jane Eyre as well as Korean family narratives (and American immigrant narratives) with a smart, talented eye for avoiding cliche and drawing out why certain things are familiar in these types of narratives. It also handles 9/11 better than most books set around that time, so it's a rarity for that reason alone. Recomended. Pitched as a kind of retelling of Jane Eyre from the viewpoint of a young Korean-American orphan in Queens, New York, I found this book unsatisfying in that sense but brilliant and delicious as a kind of coming-of-age story. Jane's journey in finding herself -- as a Korean-American, woman, lover, professional -- was captivating. A top 10 read of 2016. no reviews | add a review
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Jane Re--a half-Korean, half-American orphan--takes a position as an au pair for two Brooklyn academics and their daughter, but a brief sojourn in Seoul, where she reconnects with family, causes her to wonder if the man she loves is really the man for her as she tries to find balance between two cultures. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Jane Re is half-Korean, half- American, but growing up with her Korean aunt, uncle and cousins in Flushing. I loved the setting, with so many familiar details. Windows on the World really was the fancy place to take visiting relatives. Later on, "Dan’s ESL Coffeehouse" posts jobs for traveling ESL teachers, and ESL students choose their names from Friends. (I taught abroad slightly after Jane did, with Carries and Mirandas in with the Monicas and Rachels.)
In the original, Mr Rochester isn't really a great boyfriend, I mean, locking his wife away and then the attempted bigamy should pretty much disqualify him from heartthrob status, right? Here, Ed here is exactly the kind of guy you'd imagine flirting with the babysitter behind his wife's back. Instead of telling his wife that he doesn't care about organic food, he and Jane sneak his daughter Devon bright-colored ices and McDonalds dinners whenever Beth's not around. This comes off much less forbidden-romance and more cringe.
I guess I didn't see Beth as deserving of any of the awful things that happened to her. Ed's wife, Dr Beth Mazer, is a women's studies' prof at Mason College, and the idea of feminist academic who drinks wheatgrass juice and doesn't shave felt like an underdeveloped stereotype. In some ways, I think Beth's sloppy style is meant to set up a contrast to Jane's hyperpolished Korean coworkers, but a woman who dares to look her age just doesn't feel villainous to me.
It's really when Jane goes to Korea that the story gets moving -- the Rochester romance is so cringy that I wanted her to marry perfectly-fine Changhoon just to stay away from him. (I knew he was the underwhelming St. John match, but still.) In Korea, the story of her family, and then some of the disparate pieces of her identity start to come together. This is really the strongest and most engaging part of the novel. I also enjoyed how we saw characters grow and develop over time, not just Jane. Little Devon grows up, uncle Sang changes too, and Jane's Brooklyn friend Nina finds her own path, with connections to the old neighborhood.
Engaging coming-of-age and immigration story, with great scenes of older Brooklyn and Queens, but the central romance falls flat.