The story starts in the summer of 1941 in the countryside of northern China. Japan had invaded China in 1933, but by 1941 did not have enough troops to occupy the northern part, which left it at the mercy of bandits and some lawlessness. Little Jade was six years old and cared for by her paternal grandmother, even sleeping with her. She watched her grandmother daily meditate and send prayers to Quan Yin, which gave her a strength as she grew older and faced difficult times. She had never known her real mother and when she asked about her, her grandmother would not answer. Her father An Lang of the wealthy Su family spent hardly no time with her and then married a fifteen year old farm girl as his second wife. Her father’s household was wealthy, even to having two slave girls. The family estate lay on the edge of a large bamboo forest and Little Jade spent most of her days when it was not winter in the forest, even though her grandmother warned her of its poisonous snakes. She felt as if it was her forest and she had no one to play with..
One day her father gave her a jade disk that was made when she was born. The words Wei and An were carved into it as An is her father’s name and Wei from her mother’s name Chang Wei Jen. Then he told her that they both went to Peking University, married and after Jen got pregnant with Little Jade, Jen suggested he finish his studies in Japan so she wouldn’t get pregnant again. He did, but during that time she had another baby girl by him, but he didn’t know where she or the baby was. Throughout the story, Little Jade pined for her mother Jen as she didn’t like her stepmother Silver Pearl, who although having come from a poor farm family, put on airs because she was the wife of a wealthy man. Her grandmother died, leaving her feeling desolate because now no one cared for her. The Japanese were defeated, the countryside where Little Jade lived became very poor, bad crops, drought and she was left with Silver Pearl’s old father while Silver Pearl’s mother took care of Silver Pearl after her baby died almost at birth. They were starving, living in a shack with hardly no protection from the winter snows and cold.
Using Little Jade as the focus, the author takes us through the customs of the northern Chinese, their religious beliefs, the daily lives of both the poor and the rich and some of the civil war between the Chinese Communists and the Chinese Nationalists. The author writes very descriptively so that the reader can see, feel and have some insight into the Asian mind. This is one of those novels that acts as a study in the history and culture of a different race and a different time over sixty years ago. Although it is not a long novel and written rather simply, I enjoyed it and recommend it.