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Loading... The Joy Luck Clubby Amy Tan
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. It was a awesome book! I had to read it for English, it was awesome!!!! ( )Tan's glorious novel portrays the complex relationships between four mothers (all Chinese immigrants) and their American-born daughters. Each of the mothers came to America as young women who had survived tragedy in their native China. In their efforts to create better lives for their daughters, they created many misunderstandings as well. The daughters struggle for independence, but also long for their mothers' love and understanding. The novel is complex, especially since there are so many major characters. However, it is well worth the effort to keep everyone straight. This novel doesn't only speak to the experience of immigrants; mothers and daughters everywhere should read this book. Highly recommended! This is my least favorite Amy Tan book so far. Though the beginning of the book linked the mothers and their daughters through the Joy Luck Club, it seemed that the stories were not even connected to each other through most of the book. I had to keep referring back to the beginning to see whose daughter or whose mother was telling each story. The stories themselves were not bad, but it was almost like reading a book of short stories for me instead of reading stories that were connected as part of a longer book. I'm not a fan of short stories, so the format of this book made it much less interesting to me. I am the mother of two teenage girls. I am also a daughter. This means that the whole mother-daughter relationship is one that I have given a lot of thought and energy. Being where I am in my life, I read The Joy Luck Club with a very different perspective from the time I first read it. Jing-Mei Woo learns that her mother had a family before the one she has now, complete with a soldier husband and twin baby girls. With the war in China bringing such danger and uncertainty, her mother takes her babies and flees into the countryside. But her strength begins to fail and she makes the difficult decision to leave the girls, along with everything she owns, and hopes that someone will find them and take care of them. But life doesn't work the way she expected. She survives. For years, she knows nothing about the fate of her daughters. She remarries and has another baby daughter. Then she learns that her twins have survived. She tries to contact them, she plans a visit. But she dies before she can make that trip. All of this takes place early in the book. The rest of the book focuses on lives of 8 women, mothers and daughters. The mothers have lives and stories to tell that their daughters have never heard. I enjoyed this book, if it was not quite so emotional for me as it was the first time I read it. Instead it just reminded me of how complicated this relationship is and how much I need to work on it. This is both a moving story about the relationships between Mothers and Daughters and also a tale of just how much a heritage can shape who and what you are. Amy Tan's writing is very fluid and though the narrative moves between 4 different sets of mothers and daughters she never loses you. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:00 -0400)
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