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238 of 242 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Inside Look At Mao's China, May 8, 2011
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"Dreams of Joy" by Lisa See continues the story of sisters Pearl and May, and of Joy, the daughter they share. The story began in "Shanghai Girls" which I very recently read, so the story was fresh in my mind. Pearl and May were once rich and pampered young women who modeled for an artist who painted calendars and ads in 1930s China. The story of how the sisters came to America in the 1930s was riveting and I wasn't ready for their tale to end, so I was happy to learn that Lisa See was already at work on a sequel and "Dreams of Joy" is it. Told in alternating first-person narratives by Joy and Pearl, we first meet nineteen year old Joy, who recently discovered a huge secret about her past and decides to go to the People's Republic of China to find her birth father and to help Chairman Mao's Communist cause. Pearl is hot on her trail to China, returning to places once familiar now quite changed. The alternating points of view are an effective way to show how both idealistic, Joy, and cynical Pearl, adjust to their new environments. At first, Joys is quite enamored with the new Communist ideal of sharing and equality. Pearl, on the other hand, can easily see the cracks, fissures and hypocrisies in the new regime. As Mao's "Great Leap Forward" begins to bring famine and death, the novel includes descriptions of suffering as horrible as any zombie movie I've ever seen. These passages are shattering and difficult to read. But the novel is also full of fascinating bits of arcane information, such as that the Maoists thought that bras were oppressive and confiscated them. Also, that returning Chinese scientists had to sign a confession admitting that the Chinese moon was larger than the American moon. I expect this newest Lisa See novel will be quite popular. See has written several interesting and bestselling historical novels and certainly fans of "Shanghai Girls" will be avid to read this sequel. See does not disappoint.
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82 of 89 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Behind the Bamboo Curtain, May 31, 2011
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Once again Lisa See takes readers to China, meticulously evoking a fascinating period of history. With an anthropologist's eye for details about food, dress, manners, art, architecture and even odors, this time she pulls back the bamboo curtain to reveal Red China. Who knew, for example, that Mao frowned on the too-Western convention of women wearing bras? Dreams of Joy focuses on a triangle between a young woman named Joy; her mother, Pearl, and her aunt, May, with Joy and Pearl narrating in first-person voices. Pearl and May are characters well-drawn in Shanghai Girls, a previous See novel which covers 1937 to 1957 and moves from the girls' glittery life in Shanghai to a lesser existence in the Chinatown of Los Angeles, where they escape after the Japanese invade their country. For readers of Shanghai Girls, Dreams of Joy offers closure. But if this is the first of See's books you're picking up, I doubt that you will captivated. While Pearl is a complex woman, Joy is vapid, and where See's past novels depict a China of grace alongside scenes of brutality, Communist China is rendered with all the dreariness it deserves. As a result, while Dreams of Joy may be historically accurate, it is relentlessly bleak. In addition, the plot is far-fetched. For reasons that are not convincing, Joy, a University of Chicago student, impulsively visits China to meet her biological father, an artist respected even in the new regime. From here on, a reader must suspend disbelief as events unfold built on coincidences described in prose that never reaches lift-off. Even with its flaws, however, Dreams of Love is a powerful story about the bonds of country and motherhood. Readers will especially enjoy flashbacks to Shanghai's glory days, where "banquets came with French friends sprinkled with fine white sugar." The occasional Chinese proverb is also a treat: "An inch of gold won't buy an inch of time." Time being precious, however, I can recommend this book only if you are a reader of See's previous work.
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42 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dragon Mother, May 8, 2011
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This is a powerfully written, multi-dimensional story about love. A mother's unbreakable love for a child. Patriotic love for one's country. The multitude of forms love can take in a family. The love of a man and woman. Lisa See re-introduces us to Pearl and May, sisters in her previous novel, [[ASIN:0812980530 Shanghai Girls: A Novel]. I was delighted to see their often heartbreaking story continue. ****************Spoilers*************** 19 year old Joy sets out to China, where the newly minted Mao/Communist philosophy is just taking hold. During her one year at college, Joy naively becomes a vocal defender of Mao's "New China", joining a group that puts her family in the cross hairs of the FBI and INS. This leads to personal tragedy at home in Los Angeles' Chinatown. Long hidden secrets are revealed leaving Joy feeling betrayed and furious with Pearl, the sister who raised and loved her as her own daughter, and May, her birth mother, who pretended to be Joy's aunt. Pearl, disregarding her own safety, tracks Joy to Shanghai. After all, Pearl was born in the year of the Dragon, and she will not rest until her daughter is back in the US. This is no easy feat. The ever-changing Communist government keeps a close eye on people's movements and motives. Joy digs in her heels, becomes a propaganda spouting communal peasant in a remote Chinese countryside village much to her recently discovered biological father's and Pearl's dismay. Joy cannot 'see the forest for the trees'. Joy's Dragon Mother will go to the ends of the earth to ensure her safekeeping even after Joy impetuously marries an illiterate, spiteful village boy. The obstacles are enormous, the people untrustworthy, and the daily life vile. Mao and his minions push his people to their limits, leaving them starving to death in the streets of Shanghai and in the barren fields of the countryside. Ms. See successfully contrasts Pearl's realism with Joy's idealism all the while making the reader identify with both women. The storyline is strong with characters that are completely 3D. The pacing was perfection. I was engaged from the first to last page. Easily a stand alone novel, I relished it even more after reading "Shanghai Girls". Lisa See's research into her subjects' lives, cultural and religious beliefs combined with her impeccable knowledge of Chinese history make this a treat to savor. I also highly recommend Ms. See's other fiction and non-fiction for those interested in Chinese culture and customs. My personal favorites are: [[ASIN:0812980352 Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel]]; Peony in Love: A Novel; Shanghai Girls: A Novel and On Gold Mountain: The One-Hundred-Year Odyssey of My Chinese-American Family. Enjoy the read!
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