An auspicious debut, this sensitively written, impressively researched novel covers 20 years in the life of Pei, a Chinese girl sent to work in a silk factory during the first decades of the 20th century. Quick-witted, inquisitive, spirited Pei spends her early childhood on a poverty-stricken fish farm; her uncommunicative parents consign her to the factory for the wages she will send home. Initially terrified, Pei soon settles into the communal routine, and finds the 12-hour factory day made bearable by the kindness of supervisors and fellow workers. Along with her best friend, Lin, she decides at 16 to go through the hairdressing ceremony, in which girls pledge to dedicate their lives to silk work instead of marrying, and move into the peaceful milieu of the ``sisters' house.'' Details of the process of spinning silk, the close bonds among the sisterhood, and contrasts between the tradition-steeped existence the young women enjoy and the upheaval attending the new communist regime create a compelling narrative. Tsukiyama's simple, elegant and fluid prose weaves a vivid picture of rural China. In delicately evoking the silk workers' world, she has opened a window onto an aspect of China few outsiders ever see. Copyright 1991 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
Copyright Reed Business Information
YA-- When Pei Chung is eight years old, her father leaves her at the house of Auntie Yee so that she can work in the silk factory. Her grief at the unexplained abandonment is softened by the kindness of Yee and the other girls, and slowly she begins to thrive in her new independence. The friendship between Pei and Lin, who is the support of her once wealthy and powerful family, is forged with the lives of the silk workers who begin to demand better conditions. The China of 1919-1938, when the Japanese threat became a reality, is woven into the threads of factory life and that of families faced with ruin. The characters are drawn with fine detail. Small village life contrasts vividly with an exciting visit to Canton, and ceremonies are exquisitely described. This fascinating story is beautifully written and slightly reminiscent of Pearl Buck's The Good Earth . YAs will find it a riveting story and an absorbing look at a country trying to deal with economic and political change. --Judy Sokoll, Fairfax County Public Library, VACopyright 1992 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
Copyright Reed Business Information
This story of a Chinese woman's coming-of-age in the interval between the two world wars shouldn't be compared to first novels from Amy Tan or newcomer Gus Lee. It's a simple story with a languorous, almost dreamlike quality, and the words are sparsely descriptive, the action muted. Against a 19-year background of acrimony among communists, followers of Chiang Kai-shek, and Japanese invaders, Pei, a mulberry-leaf farmer's daughter, is "sold" into a silk factory to help support her family. She discovers the sisterhood of workers, decides against an arranged marriage, and along the way, learns that independence and freedom are not hollow words. A soft ring of gentle feminism is woven throughout as workers strike for better conditions and silk sisters rebel against unchosen, family-forced paths. (Reviewed Sept. 15, 1991)0312064659Barbara Jacobs
From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc.
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