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Under Fishbone Clouds [Paperback]

4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Polygon An Imprint of Birlinn Limited
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1846971683
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846971686
  • Product Dimensions: 7.5 x 5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,346,013 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Sam Meekings is a British poet and novelist. After studying at Oxford University, Sam moved to China, where he lived for six years, working as a teacher and editor and exploring the country. He has published two novels about contemporary China, "Under Fishbone Clouds" and "The Book of Crows", as well as a volume of poetry. He currently lives and works in the Middle East with his wife and children.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
If this book doesn't attain the high readership it deserves, there is no justice. It's quite simply one of the most lavishly imagined, masterfully researched, exquisitely written contemporary novels I've read. And if that sounds as if I'm gushing...well, it's probably because I am.

Under Fishbone Clouds is written by debut author Sam Meekings, who grew up near the south coast of England and currently resides in China. It is absolutely remarkable that the author is under 30; the book is full of gravitas and maturity that is normally the result of decades of living and writing. Interwoven seamlessly within this mesmerizing narrative is Chinese folklore and myths - absorbingly told - in addition to insights into Chinese distant and recent past history.

This novel is narrated by the Kitchen God, a common household deity who is challenged by the more powerful Jade Emperor to fathom the inner workings of the human heart. He chooses to follow a couple who, like him and his own mythical wife, were caught in the whirlwind of history: Jinyi and his wife Yuying. The tale begins in 1942 when the two fall in love, in spite of their different backgrounds and their arranged marriage, and continues to their doddering old age as the new millennium takes hold.

At the onset, Yuying follows her husband across war-torn China to her husband's rustic and impoverished home. Bad times ensue, and when they eventually make their way back to the city, the Cultural Revolution has begun; everything now belongs to the state and all social strata are forced to undergo hard labor in the factories and the fields.

Although the Mao Cultural Revolution years have been well documented, Under Fishbone Clouds takes you up close and personal to these dehumanizing times; it is a rare reader who will not wince at the no-holds-barred look at a country whose rigid ideology trumps personal relationships and freedoms. Business owners, entrepreneurs, artists, teachers, intellectuals - all are labeled "bourgeois" and re-educated in the harshest possible ways. In a particularly harrowing scene, a man has a heart attack and is ordered to "crawl" to comfort and stop being a slacker. The depths to which Jinyi and Yuying are forced to descend to - separately, without each other's comfort - is heartbreaking.

Yuying reflects, "Life isn't meant for perfect things. I knew it when we were told to put making steel above common sense; I knew it when we were told to starve patriotically because the noble peasants had been huddling around homemade furnaces instead of growing food in the fields; I knew it when the whole country began to rise up to cut down the past. I felt in the pit of my stomach all the time; I just never knew what it was until now."

Yet despite the intensity of the Cultural Revolution years, Under Fishbone Clouds is not a book about tragedy; at its heart (and a big heart it is), it's a family saga about the universal and enduring power of love. There is sheer magic and lyricism in the love that Jinyi and Yuying share as they navigate answers that are often impenetrable.

And, Meekings suggests, by love we are transfigured. Jinyi realizes toward the end of his life: "Love also changes shape. It is no longer slim, lithe, nervous and sweaty palmed. It was no longer sleepless, heavy, a stone weighing deep within the chest. It was now warm, slow, soft, a tarry old blanket huddled under in the dark. It was the last embers of a promise made decades before, still glowing red though the flames had petered down."

Using Jinyi as a catalyst, the Kitchen God comes to the realization that people don't just carry on with their lives because they must; the secret of life is love, atonement, and retribution. He puzzles out the human heart as he follows this couple through all kinds of trials: deep anguish, death of children, famine and forced labor, class warfare, drastic social and culture changes, isolation and homelessness, the loss of dignity and health.

Under Fishbone Clouds is one of those rare books that I would confidently recommend to anybody: those with an interest in the history of the East, those who are enthralled with mythology and folklore, those who hold out for the best of prose, and those who are simply seeking an old-fashioned story where love prevails. I predict an amazing future for this very talented author.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
"Under Fishbone Clouds," by Sam Meekings, is a heart-rending love story set against the stark backdrop of the last half-century of Chinese history. The Kitchen God narrates the tale. This introduces strong elements of magical realism that help to contrast and heighten the reality of the characters and plot. I was enchanted by the story and utterly fascinated by the historical details.

The book follows the story of the enduring love of Jinyi and Yuying. It is an unusual marriage between a rural, dirt-poor, uneducated, orphaned boy, and an urban, wealthy, educated girl. As they mature, their love develops an iron-clad tenacity forged by the turbulence of history.

Had I been more familiar with recent Chinese history, the book would have been easier for me to read and would have left a better impression. Indeed, I thought I had sufficient knowledge of this country and period, but my level of knowledge was not enough for this book. Many times, I needed to stop reading the text and consult a background historical text to more fully understand the context of what was taking place.

In my estimation, China is the third, and perhaps single most important, main character in this book. It is the complexity, color, diversity, ruthlessness, and vibrancy of China that remains in the mind long after the book is finished. Yes, the love story of Jinyi and Yuying pulls the reader along eagerly awaiting the next page. Also, the charming interspersed tales of Chinese folklore give the book its delightful tone of whimsy--a whimsy that contrasts sharply with the harsh reality of life in China during those impossibly difficult years. Enduring love is a strong theme, but it is China itself that muscles to the front and dominates the purpose and tone of this fine novel.

Before reading this book, I recommend that you take the time to read or refresh your knowledge of modern Chinese history. You might also want to learn about China's Kitchen God and other mythical characters. All will go a long way toward increasing your enjoyment of this epic and thoroughly engrossing work of historical fiction. The novel demonstrates how history can come alive in the hands of a skillful storyteller.

This is a fine debut performance by a talented new author.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Words from the Kitchen God October 13, 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
An obscure, mild-mannered kitchen god accepts a challenge from the Jade Emperor, Supreme of all the gods, and undertakes an examination into what constitutes the human heart. He chooses as his subjects Jinyi and Yuying, two innocents about to be caught up in the huge unpheaval in China's society, starting in the late 30s - and follows their progress as a couple to the present day, not interfering at all but observing, with occasional comments.

This is a quiet, gentle gem of a book taking on a cataclysmic time in history. At the beginning, some of the old class system still holds; Yuying is the daughter of a well-to-do family, owners of several restaurants and a large estate with separate wings and several servants. Bian Shi, Yuying's mother, is the last vestige of old-fashioned Chinese femininity; her feet were bound at a young age, but she doesn't allow their crippled condition to hold her back, and she doesn't have her daughters go through the agony of foot-binding either. When Bian Shi's husband is elsewhere, she assumes command at his restaurants and brooks no foolishment. Initially against the arranged marriage her husband sets up for Yuying with a kitchen worker in one of the restaurants - he can see how the world is going, and knows he can't provide adequately for his daughter's wedding, or for a better match - Bian Shi finally accepts her daughter's new husband, seeing how happy they are together.

The story follows Jinyi and Yuying through separations and trials due to the changes rife in China during the Maoist regime. Through it all runs a strong thread of Jinyi's and Yuying's love for each other, never faltering, and the struggles they endure as a couple together and apart. Our kitchen god, meanwhile, looks on with detached but absorbed interest, sparring with words with the Jade Emperor during his periodic reports, learning gradually what a solid relationship can be when nurtured by two steadfast hearts.

Beautifully imagined and written by Sam Meeking, the story succeeds in showing the despairs and sorrows, the hardships of a changing world, and the joys of a true marriage, with the backdrop of China's Cultural Revolution. Mr Meeking sheds light on elements I would not have been able to conjecture upon, and tells his story of Jinyi and Yuying with such compassion and vivid description you would believe that you could recognize the characters walking by. There is insight, depth, and passion here, and a gentle regard rarely seen in conventional love stories. I came away already missing the family portrayed. Highly recommended.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Very slow start, very developed storyline
This is a love story about love. This is set in China during World War 2 and is about the love between Yuying and her husband, Jinyi. Read more
Published 10 months ago by K. Cade
Painful History Beautifully Recounted
Set in China just prior to and during the Cultural Revolution and its aftermath, this love story follows a young couple, Yuying and Jinyi, from their courtship to old age and the... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Yours Truly
Unusual story but somewhat difficult read
I wanted to like this book a lot -- and I started out reading it and it was pleasurable. Somewhere around the third or fourth chapter I started losing interest had to make myself... Read more
Published 13 months ago by Hope T.
Superb reading, but why so many typos?
Although the action takes place in one of the most cruel historical periods of China, the writing has a gentle, dream-like, lyrical quality that stayed with me long after I... Read more
Published 13 months ago by Nadia S. Edwards
A story of love set against the turmoil of recent Chinese history
This novel of life and love plays out against the backdrop of recent Chinese history, from the Japanese occupation of the 1940s to the 21st century. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Laurie A. Brown
Falls a little flat in places but still a decent read
I admit it, I'm a sucker for stories that take place at grand moments in history. Throw in a few gods trying to mess with human destinies and I am a total goner. Read more
Published 14 months ago by liat2768
Impressive scholarship in a busy, cluttered novel
As a debut novel for Sam Meekings, Under Fishbone Clouds is quite an astonishing piece of writing. I commend Meekings for his accomplished craftsmanship, his impressive... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Evie Getchell
A well-told tale - LOVED it!
I can't believe this was a first novel, it was amazing!

This beautiful love story by Sam Meekings was a "true memory" story based on the experiences of his wife's... Read more
Published 15 months ago by maximum verbosity
Doctor Zhivago, with potstickers
What is love? No, I don't know either. But the kitchen god, questing to find out (and to win a bet with the Jade Emperor) sets his sight on the lives and lifetimes of two young... Read more
Published 15 months ago by ringo
story was superbly told
A gentle story that unfolds over decades (starting in the forties), this is the story of Jinyi and Yuying, whose love for one another, trials and tribulations serve as a lesson of... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Soar
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