Review by Booklist Review
Every generation of women in Emily's family is connected by a red birthmark "so they would never lose each other again," according to an old legend. They also share an unmatched resilience that ensures their survival, again and again. In the buildup to the Chinese Revolution of 1949, Yunhong must choose between salvaging what's left of her family and her own aspirations. While she dreams of marrying the son of a rich lord, her brothers become entangled in the revolt, which her parents refuse to acknowledge. The ensuing tragedy cracks open a deep sorrow that continues to haunt Yunhong's daughter and her two granddaughters and eventually makes its way across the ocean. Emily, their descendent in present-day Boston, tries to understand the complicated relationships of the women in her family. But to do so, she must unravel their past and finally lay bare the pain that comes with it. This powerful yet tender epic is perfect for readers of intergenerational fiction driven by strong female leads.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Chen debuts with a poignant saga of a Chinese family's heartbreak and loss over nearly a century. In 1927, Yunghong Zhang, the daughter of a doctor in rural southern China, marries Haiyang, the son of a local lord. Soon thereafter, her happiness is cut short when her two older brothers participate in the peasant revolution, resulting in Haiyang's death during a raid on his family's house. Yunghong, pregnant with Haiyang's daughter, returns to her family, who raise her daughter, Yuexin, as the child of a distant cousin, futilely hoping Yunghong will marry again. At school Yuexin is called a "bastard" by her classmates, and after Yunghong tells Yuexin the truth about her origins, she resents her mother for keeping them a secret. During the Cultural Revolution, Yuexin gives birth to twins Hongxing, who becomes an actress, and Yonghong, whose first love dies after being assigned grueling farm work by the government. In the 1990s, Yonghong moves to Boston and has a daughter while Hongxing unhappily stays in China, where in 2018 she's persecuted after falling in love with a woman. Chen's sprawling narrative provides a wrenching window onto the ways in which a family is torn apart by political upheaval. This will move readers. Agent: Sarah Bowlin, Aevitas Creative Management. (May)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Four generations of a Chinese and Chinese American family navigate the ties and trials of kinship. Chen begins her first novel with a fairytale romance in rural pre-communist China. Yunhong, whose name translates as something like Clouds of Happy Red, is from the Zhangs, a family of modest means, and her beau is the son of a local lord. But their marriage in 1927 is short-lived. One of her brothers is among the revolutionaries who ransack the lord's house and kill her husband. The time shifts to 1967 and Nanjing. Yunhong's twin granddaughters march off to school carrying Mao's Little Red Book. Children have names like Leap Forward and Resist America. One twin loses her lover when he's rusticated, like so many during the Cultural Revolution, and dies. The other, Hongxing, dreams of "joining an art troupe" and falls into a forbidden love. The book's last big section jumps to the U.S. in the years 2004-2009. While some family members left China for the U.S., one who remained is Hongxing. She enjoyed a successful acting career until her illicit love emerged and she was "erased from public memory by the government." Feeling utterly alone, she visits her sister in the U.S. and hopes to persuade her to have their ailing mother buried in China. Chen's narrative is full of poignant family moments set against the larger canvas of history, while singular and recurring images link the fragmented narrative: a birthmark carried by daughters; a silk-lined trunk and its keepsakes handed down across generations; memories that are rendered as bedtime stories with dragons and princes; an old damaged photo restored by computer to startling clarity. Throughout, the author depicts women who find in themselves the strength to be more than the times might allow and in their families a sweet solace amid that struggle. A poignant, impressive debut. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.