The Joy Luck Club

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By: Amy Tan
(30 customer reviews)
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EDITORIAL REVIEW

A stunning literary achievement, The Joy Luck Club explores the tender and tenacious bond between four daughters and their mothers. The daughters know one side of their mothers, but they don't know about their earlier never-spoken of lives in China. The mothers want love and obedience from their daughters, but they don't know the gifts that the daughters keep to themselves. Heartwarming and bittersweet, this is a novel for mother, daughters, and those that love them.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
Pub. Date: 21st September 2006
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 288
Ean: 9780143038092
Isbn: 0143038095

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

The story of four immigration families
~ Written on Oct 26, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

This is a story of love between four immigrations families. There are four Chinese women and their four American daughters have been written on this book. The book has talked about the different behavior and thinking way between the four Chinese mothers and their American daughters. Each individual story in this book is enough with different language and different culture. This book is good at separating the whole book with each individual little story that is very helpful for me to be concentrating. When I was reading the book, I was interesting at reading very small stories. From reading the whole book, I spent a lot of time on fingering out who is the mother and this girl is whose daughter. And also I spent a lot of time on reading the mothers' experiences from their previous time and American time. From this book, I see how each Chinese woman come to America with difficulties and how they faced the difficulties and trading their new life.
This book talked a lot about women and their daughters, I heard many people said this is a woman book, but I think this book is good for everyone because it could tell us what are love and the relationship between parents and children. This book is a very good choice for everyone to read and learn the experiences of dealing with the relationship of parents and children from the four Chinese women and their American daughters. This is a book used four Chinese women as the example of how Chinese people raised their own country by personally during the war and also using their whole life to teach their daughters to do so.

they were out of stock
~ Written on Oct 4, 2009. out of 1 users found this review helpful.

I ordered this book to replace a lost library book.
It never arrived and I got an e-mail they were out of stock.
With today's technology, why wasn't this info available when I placed the order?
I would have ordered it somewhere else.

Mothers and their daughters
~ Written on Sep 23, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

This book and The Kitchen God's Wife, also by Ms. Tan, are very similar in terms of theme and mood. There were multiple generations of women, each of whom didn't entirely understand the struggles the other went through. This was an interesting study of how we can interact with and communicate with another person, without ever understanding them completely.

Great anecdotes, but a subpar novel
~ Written on Aug 9, 2009. 2 out of 3 users found this review helpful.

I've liked some of Amy Tan's other work, but The Joy Luck Club just didn't work for me. It's a story of four Chinese mothers and their Chinese-American daughters, with seven narrators (all but the one mother who has died). The book is divided into 16 chapters, perhaps more accurately described as 16 related short stories; the women have one chapter each from childhood and one from adulthood, while Jing-mei, the daughter of the dead mother, has 4 chapters from adulthood. Most of the acclaim for this book seems to come from the portrayal of the relationships between the mothers and the daughters; they seem true-to-life but are repetitive (every daughter lacks respect for her mother and understanding of her Chinese origins; every mother speaks in vague metaphors and is always right). Many of the events portrayed are interesting, and you can't help but learn a bit about Chinese culture. If you like short stories and read them as such, this book might work for you, but it didn't for me, for two main reasons:

1. The women's voices are indistinguishable. All of the mothers have basically the same personality; the daughters have a few differences but all talk the same way and have similar life stories. Seven first-person narrators would be a challenge for the most experienced of authors, and this is Amy Tan's first book, so it's no surprise that she falls short. I had a hard time remembering which daughter went with which mother and which childhood with which woman. As a reader of epics with dozens or even hundreds of characters, I almost never have trouble telling characters apart, especially when there are only eight of them, but I did here.

2. There's no resolution. Stories need a beginning, middle, and end, but this one's missing the end. Jing-mei's sections book-end the novel, and she has a satisfying personal resolution, but the other six women are left in limbo. For instance, one of the younger women is in a troubled marriage. At the end of her chapter, she finally confronts her husband... and then it's over. Did they work to solve their problems? Did they get divorced? Did they deal with the personal issues that complicated the marriage in the first place? We don't know. At least three of the women's stories end this way. I don't mind books ending with some general hope for the future rather than an exhaustive tying up of loose ends, but the plot arc needs to come to a close.

One criticism I have to disagree with, though, is the portrayal of men, especially Asian men, whom many other critical reviewers say are portayed negatively. I didn't think that was the case at all: all the girls' fathers are sympathetic figures (even the clueless American one), and two of the three troubled or failed marriages on the part of the younger generation involve women who are just as much at fault as their (white) husbands. No one is in an abusive relationship, and the men don't blatantly favor their sons over their daughters. Some of the older women have nasty men in their pasts, but with each one comes a nasty woman who encourages and enables him.

Amy Tan isn't a bad author, and at this point she was probably still learning her limits. If you're interested in her work, I would recommend The Hundred Secret Senses, which showcases her strengths but lacks the weaknesses of this book.

Mothers & Daughters - Joys & Disappointments
~ Written on Jul 10, 2009. 1 out of 1 users found this review helpful.

I am way late to reading this book, but I am so glad that I did! The story involves 4 Chinese immigrant women and their 4 American born daughters. The mothers have joined together in a Mah Jong club, which gives the title of the book. They lament the fact their daughters are not as tied to their Chinese culture and heritage as the mothers would like. The daughters feel their mothers don't understand their lives in America.

In this book, we learn the lives the mothers had in China before coming to America, and how that shaped who they are. We also see how the daughters, in living their lives, are shaped by the decisions they are making.

It seems mothers and daughters always have somewhat of a struggle to be understood by each other, no matter the culture, and this book brings forth a common theme. It is well written and so very easy to get swept up in the lives of all of these women. The only problem I had (and hence the 4 stars) was keeping track of which mother was related to which daughter and which story went with which mother. I kept having to refer back in the book to refresh my memory - and I didn't read this book over a long period of time. That was a bit frustrating, but overall the book was a delight.

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