The Joy Luck Club
by Amy Tan
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone
The book started off with Jing-Mei Woo, who was asked to sit in as one of the four players in the Joy Luck Club. She was to replace her mother who had recently passed away. The Joy Luck Club consists of four women who played a common Chinese game, and base on what I have seen it is usually used for gambling. The Joy Luck Club is what develops the plot because it is where we get the stories of each of the women in it.
This book is separated into four sections. In all of these sections there ...more
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Read in March, 2008
The Joy Luck Club is a tremendously well written book filled with passion, emotion, and love that arises from family interactions. This book is written in the form of eight vignettes, four from four different women (the mothers) and four from their daughters. This book concentrates on four Chinese American immigrant families that start this "club" for playing the traditional game of Mahjong. The story begins with June Woo who had just lost her mother to an aneurysm. She was chosen ...more
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Read in January, 2004
"I wiped my eyes and looked in the mirror. I was surprised at what I saw. I had on a beautiful red dress, but what I saw was even more valuable. I was strong. I was pure. I had genuine thoughts inside that no one could see, that no one could ever take away from me. I was like the wind.
I threw my head back and smiled proudly to myself. And then I draped the large embroidered red scarf over my face and covered these thoughts up. But underneath the scarf I still knew who I was. I made a...more
I threw my head back and smiled proudly to myself. And then I draped the large embroidered red scarf over my face and covered these thoughts up. But underneath the scarf I still knew who I was. I made a...more
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Read in April, 2000
recommends it for:
Best Quality people
Ok, I admit it, I was obsessed with Amy Tan my first year of college. I learned all there was about her, read The Joy Luck Club, and finally I gave up hope.
As a freshmen, at Linfield College, I was astonished that Amy Tan could have possibly walked the same hallowed halls of Melrose, perhaps sat in the same offices in the English department, or read a book in Northrup's astro-turf room.
My daydreams were filled with her coming over to my dorm room to have tea and "talk literatur...more
As a freshmen, at Linfield College, I was astonished that Amy Tan could have possibly walked the same hallowed halls of Melrose, perhaps sat in the same offices in the English department, or read a book in Northrup's astro-turf room.
My daydreams were filled with her coming over to my dorm room to have tea and "talk literatur...more
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After I read The Joy Luck Club (summer required reading before sophomore English in high school), I started pestering my mom about her abandoned children in mainland China. I also declared that I would name my two kids after the aforementioned abandoned children: Spring Flower and Spring Rain.
My mom laughed in my face about the latter, saying no self-respecting Chinese would give their kids such pedestrian names, and would be mock-pissed about the former.
The truth is that The Joy Luck Cl...more
My mom laughed in my face about the latter, saying no self-respecting Chinese would give their kids such pedestrian names, and would be mock-pissed about the former.
The truth is that The Joy Luck Cl...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommended to Kristin by:
Rikki
I truly enjoyed Amy Tan's style of writing (this is the first book of hers that I've read). She has a way of saying things that evokes so much emotion and I truly admire that about her as a storyteller. I especially love how in blending the story of the Chinese mothers and their Chinese-American daughters that she makes you feel as if you are a part of these women's lives and their culture and she draws you into their circle and into their individual psyches. I really understood and identified w...more
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Read in April, 2007
My mom really wanted me to read this book, mainly because of it's emphasis on the classic mother-daughter relationship. But I saw it more as a reflection on the mother's life before her child and how it sort of affected how she raised her daughter later on. I never really saw the daughter (with the exception of June) learn about their mother and hold a new understanding of her. The most the other girls caught was a sort of toleration of their mother.
Amy Tan is one of those writers who draws ...more
Amy Tan is one of those writers who draws ...more
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20th-century,
american-fiction
Read in September, 2005
I quite liked this, though not as much as the other work of Tan's that I've read (The Bonesetter's Daughter). Both of them deal with very similar themes - cultural identity, displacement, the problems facing the first generation children of immigrants, the problems of those immigrants themselves, how to hold onto your own culture in a vastly different land.
However, I felt as if The Joy Luck Club was a less powerful novel for me. I think that was not because Tan addressed those ...more
However, I felt as if The Joy Luck Club was a less powerful novel for me. I think that was not because Tan addressed those ...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in March, 2008
Amy Tan's novel tells a story about four female Chinese immigrants that came to America. It is written in the perspective of these four women and their four daughters. It is divided into four sections and in each section there are 4 chapters. Each chapter describes a character's experience during a time in America. While in America these character experience many difficulties and some discrimination. It described the relationship that these Chinese women had which weren't so great because they w...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Anyone
I thought that this book was really good. The way that it had shown the stories of the moms and daughters made me want to read more. This book kind of reminds me of Maxine Hong Kingston's "Woman Warrior" because of the chapters splitting into different point of views. The different stories of the 2 generations kept me interested. The beginning stories of Jing-Mei's Mother and herself were most appealing to me because it has the quote that stuck out to me the most out of the whole b...more
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Read in January, 1998
I love this book! As a first generation child in this country (my parents immigrated from Vietnam), I could really relate to the girls in the story. I was the girl who played piano, always being forced to practice. Although I loved music and was a talented pianist, I quit because I couldn't deal with the pressure anymore. It wasn't for my enjoyment, it was to please my parents (or at least that's what it seemed like). I think we all have ways of dealing with the pressures of childhood.
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Read in February, 2007
I took an Asian History class in college and loved it. The Chinese culture has a way of drawing you in. Or maybe it wasn’t really Chinese culture; I wouldn’t know — maybe I can only see my American perception of Chinese culture.
Whatever it was — culture or only a facsimile of it — reading The Joy Luck Club drew me almost instantly. The book is written with prose and descriptions fitting of the characters — beautiful and lyrical but with hidden sorrows and bitterness. The plot (wa...more
Whatever it was — culture or only a facsimile of it — reading The Joy Luck Club drew me almost instantly. The book is written with prose and descriptions fitting of the characters — beautiful and lyrical but with hidden sorrows and bitterness. The plot (wa...more
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
Everyone
I've heard several good review about this book and decided to give it a try, and I wasn't dissappointed. I found myself able to relate to all the characters in the book. Reading this books I had to admit was like an emotional rollercoaster ride. In a way, after reading The Joy Luck Club, I felt more closer to my parents. I was able to understand in a new light why my mother make the decision she does. By the end of the book I became really emotional, and all I can say is that The ...more
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Joy Luck Club starts off when these 4 middle-aged women come together and played mah-jong. There was a woman who was replaced with her daughter becuase of her death. There are short stories where each of the women in it describes her life: journey to America, childhood.
What i thought was good in this book was that there are many chinese being spoken in the book. Since it was in the past, the author shows how it was like at home, how they spoke, what they did. It was very interesting. It forms ...more
What i thought was good in this book was that there are many chinese being spoken in the book. Since it was in the past, the author shows how it was like at home, how they spoke, what they did. It was very interesting. It forms ...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
Chinese? or people with uncoomon wisdom
The book contain many protagonist that interact with each other in the joy luck club. There is four mothers each who has a daughter in the story. There is eight characters, all are Chinese or part Chinese who express a view of something. Some were about how they were not accepted as Chinese even in their skin becase of how they act. Others would be how both the daughter and mohter have differences. All these combine into a idea where in the end; all of them learn something and realize what...more
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bookshelves:
adult
Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
adult women
My daughter has been assigned to read this book in her Sophmore English class and because of my over-protective nature I decided that I should read it first, so that I could censor it for her. As it turns out, I didn't feel the need to censor any of it. It does contain many disturbing scenes, but is tastefully written and therefore I didn't see anything objectionable.
I didn't really care for the format that the book was written in. It is a collection of short stories which made it difficu...more
I didn't really care for the format that the book was written in. It is a collection of short stories which made it difficu...more
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bookshelves:
asian-american,
memoir
This is a memoir-ish type of book since the author herself said (somewhere) that June's story is heavily based on her own experiences growing up. I haven't read this in a while, but I enjoyed it. It was one of the first books I read on the experiences of an Asian American and the culture clash between "American born Chinese" and their parents, the previous generation who had immigrated to the States.
It details the often contentious relationships between four Chinese immigrant wome...more
It details the often contentious relationships between four Chinese immigrant wome...more
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Read in January, 1998
recommended to Holly by:
My Mother
Four mothers, four daughters, four families whose histories shift with the four winds depending on who's "saying" the stories. In 1949 four Chinese women, recent immigrants to San Francisco, begin meeting to eat dim sum, play mahjong, and talk. United in shared unspeakable loss and hope, they call themselves the Joy Luck Club. Rather than sink into tragedy, they choose to gather to raise their spirits and money. "To despair was to wish back for something already lost. Or to prolon...more
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Read in November, 2003
It's been ages since I read this book (almost four years), but I know I liked it. I've always been fascinated by Asian cultures (and I hope you'll forgive me if that comes across as so general as to be patronizing or offensive in any way), and this was a nice insight to some of the traditions and personal histories of a Chinese family.
I'm not one for sappy mother/daughter or other cross generational stories, but the foreign culture was different enough from my American experience that the st...more
I'm not one for sappy mother/daughter or other cross generational stories, but the foreign culture was different enough from my American experience that the st...more
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Read in January, 1992
recommends it for:
All Time Favorite Book
Ever read a book that when you read it you felt defined by the author's work, and you thought to yourself, "How did the author get into my head?" This is that book for me!
Amy Tan is a master at capturing the complexities of mother-daughter relationships. However, she is also THE master of the even more complex and chaotic relationship of an "old world mother" raisng a "new world daughter." Many of us know the trials and errors that occur as our Asian mothers ...more
Amy Tan is a master at capturing the complexities of mother-daughter relationships. However, she is also THE master of the even more complex and chaotic relationship of an "old world mother" raisng a "new world daughter." Many of us know the trials and errors that occur as our Asian mothers ...more
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