The Lost Daughter of Happiness
by Geling Yan
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Narrated in a haunting voice that mulls over painful truths of the past, this is an unflinching, erotic tale of forbidden love in turn-of-the-century San Francisco. Fusang is a Chinese girl who is shanghaied from her village and brought to San Francisco, where she enters a seedy underworld.Tags
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Member Reviews
The Lost Daughter of Happiness is a remarkable novel, a love story unlike any I've read. It unfolds in alternating points of view. Writing in the second person, as if she were speaking to Fusang, looking back at Fusang's life from the present day, the narrator's language is factual, unemotional, sometimes bordering on contemptuous: You are a prostitute, she says, brought to California from China, one who didn't die during the long voyage, who didn't succumb to disease or beatings after being sold into slavery. "I certainly won't let people confuse you with any of the other three thousand whores from China." Occasionally the narrator quotes histories of the California Gold Rush from which she draws her account of Fusang. Occasionally she show more tells Fusang tidbits about her own life as a recent Chinese immigrant, about her own perplexity understanding the ways of white people, including her husband.
In this new novel, set in the 1870s, she has borrowed a figure from history, Fusang, the most famous prostitute in San Francisco, and has imagined an unusual lover for her, a 12 year old white boy named Chris.
Approaching the issue of anti-Chinese racism through these two characters, she tells a tale of slavery, rape and murder, and, ostensibly, love. I say ostensibly because Chris and Fusang remain completely opaque throughout the novel; we can never comprehend their motivations or thought processes. show less
In this new novel, set in the 1870s, she has borrowed a figure from history, Fusang, the most famous prostitute in San Francisco, and has imagined an unusual lover for her, a 12 year old white boy named Chris.
Approaching the issue of anti-Chinese racism through these two characters, she tells a tale of slavery, rape and murder, and, ostensibly, love. I say ostensibly because Chris and Fusang remain completely opaque throughout the novel; we can never comprehend their motivations or thought processes. show less
I picked this book up at the wrong time, I was meant to be preparing my presentations for uni, and here it was, a major distraction! This is a book that grabs you from the first, a strange book, almost breathless as it has no chapter breaks. What we have here is a portrait of China Town in San Francisco, battles between the Chinese immigrants and the white residents in the 1860s, through the life of Fusang.
The story of Fusang, a hard girl to describe, is married to a man who has gone to the Gold Mountain, and one day leaves to join him with a group of people traffickers. As I said, she is hard to describe, she is docile with her captors, even, later, with her johns, just giving them an enigmatic smile. She is bought at an auction by a show more gangster, which moves her up in the ranks. Fusang is seemingly unaffected by the men who come to her, though there is one she can't forget, the young Chris. It is their relationship that will be the main focus of the book.
What makes this book different to many others, is that the narrator is a a modern day woman trying to piece together Fusang's life and her relationship with Chris and she can't keep herself from the story. show less
The story of Fusang, a hard girl to describe, is married to a man who has gone to the Gold Mountain, and one day leaves to join him with a group of people traffickers. As I said, she is hard to describe, she is docile with her captors, even, later, with her johns, just giving them an enigmatic smile. She is bought at an auction by a show more gangster, which moves her up in the ranks. Fusang is seemingly unaffected by the men who come to her, though there is one she can't forget, the young Chris. It is their relationship that will be the main focus of the book.
What makes this book different to many others, is that the narrator is a a modern day woman trying to piece together Fusang's life and her relationship with Chris and she can't keep herself from the story. show less
I really struggled with The Lost Daughter of Happiness by acclaimed Chinese novelist Geling Yan. Proclaimed as a haunting and moving love story, this novel mostly left me feeling confused. The story is told in a strange second person narrative that left the main character voiceless which made it very difficult to have much empathy for her or the very difficult life she lived.
The novel, set in 1860’s San Francisco, does give the reader a very accurate picture of the anti-Chinese feelings that were prevalent at that time. Fusang, was kidnapped in China, shipped to San Francisco and sold into prostitution. Transported from brothel to brothel she is followed by her admirer, a young white boy called Chris who believes himself in love with show more her. Another character, the very interesting Da Yong, also is heavily involved in her life becoming her owner, her pimp and eventually it is revealed that they were married by proxy many years ago. The problem with the style in which the book is written is that the reader feels complete detachment. We are never given any insight into how Fusang feels about being kidnapped, becoming a prostitute or even if she cares for any of the men in her life.
Overall I found The Lost Daughter of Happiness to be a slow moving and rather difficult read. The author was clear in her depiction of the exploitation and oppression that Chinese women faced and I believe her intention was to allow the reader to see the racial ignorance and the clash of cultures in an objective way but I wanted a story that I could sink my teeth into not a series of vague impressions. show less
The novel, set in 1860’s San Francisco, does give the reader a very accurate picture of the anti-Chinese feelings that were prevalent at that time. Fusang, was kidnapped in China, shipped to San Francisco and sold into prostitution. Transported from brothel to brothel she is followed by her admirer, a young white boy called Chris who believes himself in love with show more her. Another character, the very interesting Da Yong, also is heavily involved in her life becoming her owner, her pimp and eventually it is revealed that they were married by proxy many years ago. The problem with the style in which the book is written is that the reader feels complete detachment. We are never given any insight into how Fusang feels about being kidnapped, becoming a prostitute or even if she cares for any of the men in her life.
Overall I found The Lost Daughter of Happiness to be a slow moving and rather difficult read. The author was clear in her depiction of the exploitation and oppression that Chinese women faced and I believe her intention was to allow the reader to see the racial ignorance and the clash of cultures in an objective way but I wanted a story that I could sink my teeth into not a series of vague impressions. show less
I understand why Harriet is the #1 reviewer - she put in words exactly how I felt about the book. I thought the setting and "history" of the period was interesting, but I just could not become attached to any of the characters.
Een liefdesgeschiedenis van een jonge blanke jongen en een Chinese prostituee.
I started to read this book but wasn't really enjoying it, so I stopped.
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Author Information
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- La fille perdue du bonheur
- Original publication date
- 1996
- People/Characters
- Fusang; Chris
- Important places
- Chinatown, San Francisco, California, USA
- First words
- This is who you are.
The one dressed in red, slowly rising from the creaking bamboo bed, is you. The embroidery on your satin padded jacket must weigh ten catties; the parts stitched most densely are as hard as ice, or ar... (show all)mor. From a distance of one hundred and twenty years, I am amazed by the needlework, so thoroughly beyond me.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
Classifications
- Genres
- General Fiction, Fiction and Literature, Historical Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 813 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English
- LCC
- PL2925 .K55 .F8713 — Language and Literature Languages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania Languages of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania Chinese language and literature Chinese literature Individual authors and works
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 150
- Popularity
- 217,301
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.22)
- Languages
- Chinese, Dutch, English, French
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 11
- ASINs
- 2






























































