The Bonesetter's Daughter (Ballantine Reader's Circle)
by Amy Tan
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Read in January, 2007
recommended to Holly by:
My Mother
At the beginning of Amy Tan's fourth novel, two packets of papers written in Chinese calligraphy fall into the hands of Ruth Young. One bundle is titled Things I Know Are True and the other, Things I Must Not Forget. The author? That would be the protagonist's mother, LuLing, who has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. In these documents the elderly matriarch, born in China in 1916, has set down a record of her birth and family history, determined to keep the facts from vanishing as her min...more
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Read in June, 2008
Recommended by Amelia - I can't wait to get into it! I'm a big fan of Amy Tan.
Wow. I'll be honest; the first half of the book really irritated me. I know that Amy Tan is known for writing about distressed mother/daughter relationships, but I really couldn't believe how horrid these particular characters lives had been. The book spans three generations of torn mothers and daughters and while I enjoyed learning about Chinese heritage and watching the cultural and generational differences unfol...more
Wow. I'll be honest; the first half of the book really irritated me. I know that Amy Tan is known for writing about distressed mother/daughter relationships, but I really couldn't believe how horrid these particular characters lives had been. The book spans three generations of torn mothers and daughters and while I enjoyed learning about Chinese heritage and watching the cultural and generational differences unfol...more
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bookshelves:
general-fiction
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
those who love cultural fiction
This was my first Amy Tan book in almost 7 years, ever since I read The Joy Luck Club and The Kitchen God's Wife. I don't have copy's of the first two anymore so I can't pick them up to compare, but I have to admit that reading Amy Tan now I'm not as impressed with her writing as I once was.
Her content, however, is as always quite stirring and appropriate for those of a mixed-culture background. As a Chinese American myself I find her content, while technically fiction, truly strikes a cho...more
Her content, however, is as always quite stirring and appropriate for those of a mixed-culture background. As a Chinese American myself I find her content, while technically fiction, truly strikes a cho...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
fans of historical fiction, mother-daughter relationships, chinese literature, etc
Call it chick-lit if you will, but I like Amy Tan. The Hundred Secret Senses is one of my favorite books (I should read it again), and I picked up the Bonesetter's Daughter years ago and never got around to reading it until now.
This book centers largely around the relationship between Ruth Young and her elderly Chinese mother, LuLing. LuLing has been diagnosed with dementia, and while caring for her, Ruth happens across some pages written in Chinese in what she recognizes to be her mother's ...more
This book centers largely around the relationship between Ruth Young and her elderly Chinese mother, LuLing. LuLing has been diagnosed with dementia, and while caring for her, Ruth happens across some pages written in Chinese in what she recognizes to be her mother's ...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
very patient people who are tolerant of meh characters.
This was the first Amy Tan book I read. This book wasn't specifically recommended, but the author was. I was expecting something magical to happen as I turned the pages, but I couldn't get past the first four or five chapters of the book. Besides the overly long sections of actionless description (the story stagnated because of a poor balance between backstory, scene setup and description, and actual let's-move-things-along plot), the main characte...more
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bookshelves:
fiction
Read in August, 2002
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in March, 2008
recommended to Amelia by:
Diane and Susanrecommends it for: Mom, Kristen, Celeste
Amy Tan has a way of starting a story that's impossible to put down. For the first half of the book I kept wondering what about it made it so good. Anecdotal stories, relatable characters, Chinese folklore for interest ... these are all good, but I finally realized in the last quarter of the book why I liked it so much. Because it's a book about learning to love your past no matter how many scars it gives you, and learning to love and forgive your parents and ancestors, no matter what they may h...more
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Read in August, 2007
usually I like reading books with historical background, but this book is not that enjoyable to me.
Amy Tan is famous for her writing of the mixture of Chinese and America culture.
I always love culture, so I decided to read this book.
I usually skim the book first.
Unfortunately, the first and second chapter is not that interesting.
I have to admit that my imagination was not run wild.
The latter chapters were better.
Funny things happened after I read this book.
:) I could't sleep ha...more
Amy Tan is famous for her writing of the mixture of Chinese and America culture.
I always love culture, so I decided to read this book.
I usually skim the book first.
Unfortunately, the first and second chapter is not that interesting.
I have to admit that my imagination was not run wild.
The latter chapters were better.
Funny things happened after I read this book.
:) I could't sleep ha...more
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Read in March, 2008
I enjoyed this book - but after reading some of her other books...they all blur together and I got a little bored with the same story line. It is the same theme as all of Amy Tan's other books....mother/daughter relations of Chinese Americans. The clash of culture is always interesting. The different lives from one generation to the next always cause me to think about my pioneer ancestors. The things we struggle with are so very different - and yet in other ways...they are the same. But und...more
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While Amy Tan is 'the' Chinese-American writer, I find that her stories have nothing whatsoever to do with my own Chinese-American experience. Maybe she's just from a different generation? I am perplexed.
Some parts of this book rubbed me the wrong way. For example, her transcriptions of the narrator's mother's broken English word-for-word made me wince. It reminded me of those movies in which we know that the foreign character is 'foreign' because he/she speaks English with a foreign acc...more
Some parts of this book rubbed me the wrong way. For example, her transcriptions of the narrator's mother's broken English word-for-word made me wince. It reminded me of those movies in which we know that the foreign character is 'foreign' because he/she speaks English with a foreign acc...more
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Read in October, 2007
Amy Tan targets the mother/daughter theme once again in this book, The Bonesetter's Daughter. In this novel, the reader goes on a journey with the main character Ruth. Ruth is a chinese born American who resides in San Francisco, United States. For her entire childhood and half of her adulthood, she has not understood her mother. She felt her mother was cheap, bossy, embarrassing. She never thought that her mother also had weak spots. That she has been through many conflicts. In the novel, Ruth ...more
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bookshelves:
2008,
fiction
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for:
Interests in Asian History, Immigration, intergenerational themes, alzheimers
I picked this book up at a book exchange in IguazĂș Argentina for the bus, and it really had me spell-bound. I read 200 pages on a long bus ride and reserved the last 100 for my last week in Buenos Aires. Tan is a phenomenal author at developing characters that are easy to relate to.
LuLing is Ruth's mother and immigrated from China to the US. We learn through Ruth during the first part that life has not always been easy for LuLing, and as she ages, Ruth has more burning questions about her p...more
LuLing is Ruth's mother and immigrated from China to the US. We learn through Ruth during the first part that life has not always been easy for LuLing, and as she ages, Ruth has more burning questions about her p...more
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I have enjoyed other books by Amy Tan and enjoyed this one as well although the ending is a bit pat and seems contrived. I particularly like the middle part of the book that takes place in China. I felt surrounded by the cosmology of the Chinese family and the good and bad spirits, the beautiful way a word or expression can mean many things. It was interesting to see how Tan interprets how social inheritance works - how we are more than just genetics, but also a product of our parents and gran...more
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Read in March, 2008
Ruth is a 40-something American woman who has come to the realization that her Chinese immigrant mother, LaoLing, is losing her memory as a result of dementia. LaoLing, who realized that her memory was leaving her before her daughter did, painstakingly penned her life story and secrets to share with her daughter. Much of the novel is LaoLing's memories of her life and experiences in China. Two mother-daughter stories are presented in the multigenerational, bi-continental family story, that of La...more
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read-2008
Read in February, 2008
Like most of Tan's books, this novel focuses on mother-daughter relationships extending over several generations. It is a tale of discovering the truth about our past and ourselves. Ruth's mother LuLing is suffering with the early stages of Alzheimer's and carefully writes down the "Things I Know Are True" and the "Things I Must Not Forget" - leaving them for her daughter to find. These are the vehicles through which Ruth discovers the secrets and truths hidden in her mot...more
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Read in September, 2007
I finally finished this last night. While a lot of Amy Tan's books are aimed at women, this is a pretty good book for anyone.
The book itself deals with a woman in San Francisco dealing with her mothers Alzheimer disease. She finds some of her mothers writings, written just when her memory was starting to go. The writings deal with her life in China before coming to the US, and tell a pretty cool and sad story about a young woman dealing with being a bastard and finding out that her nursemaid...more
The book itself deals with a woman in San Francisco dealing with her mothers Alzheimer disease. She finds some of her mothers writings, written just when her memory was starting to go. The writings deal with her life in China before coming to the US, and tell a pretty cool and sad story about a young woman dealing with being a bastard and finding out that her nursemaid...more
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Read in January, 2002
recommends it for:
Mothers and daughters
This was part of my "ration" of fiction when I was immersed in theology studies, and it left me with a lot to think about. I loved the back story a lot more than Ruth's. But I've taken on more responsibilities for Mom's well-being in recent years and can better appreciate the mundane mess of my own story. I also can identify with a ghost writer who can't find her voice until she grounds herself by helping excavate her mother's memories, which are also part of her next-generation story....more
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Read in February, 2008
I was totally captivated by The Joy Luck Club and while this isn't quite as adroit in its story-telling, I still found it moving and memorable. Amy Tan's writing is lyrical and her imagery just so outstanding; I also think she manages to build characters and relationships that are believable, sometimes painfully so.
Like many flashback passages or sections of a book, this one's feel disconnected and siloed off from the rest of the narrative and the story loses some of its impact with that. ...more
Like many flashback passages or sections of a book, this one's feel disconnected and siloed off from the rest of the narrative and the story loses some of its impact with that. ...more
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bookshelves:
historical-fiction,
summer-read
I just didn't enjoy this as much as Amy Tan's other books. Her plot development, with its mother-daughter issues, has become almost a formula. She does do a credible job describing life in China in the last century and I came away with a deeper understanding of that culture. I just never thought of Amy Tan as the Maeve Binchy of Asian writing. This is not meant to be a criticism of Maeve Binchy, an author whose well-written books I think are fun to read. It just is I get the impression that...more
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