| The Kitchen God's Wife |  | Author: Amy Tan Publisher: Audio Literature Category: Book
List Price: $15.95 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $15.94 (100%)
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Rating: 162 reviews Sales Rank: 2117046
Format: Abridged Media: Audio Cassette Number Of Items: 2 Running Time: 180 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 0769404340 EAN: 9781558002661 ASIN: 1558002669
Publication Date: May 1991 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BOX HAS SOMEWEAR NO TEARS CLEAN UNMARKED TAPE PRIVATE
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Tan follows the success of The Joy Luck Club with this moving, witty story oftwo women who have kept each other's secrets for 40 years. 2 cassettes.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 157 more reviews...
A Story of a Woman's Relationship With Her Daughter October 1, 2008 This brilliantly written novel by Amy Tan tells the story of a mother's life in China during WWII and, later, her relationship with her daughter, Pearl. The author's use of voice brings the story to life remarkably well. Amy Tan develops her characters with intense detail, and I could almost feel their thoughts and emotions exuding from the page while the story unfolded. The beautiful understanding that grows between the mother and Pearl throughout the novel intermingles with a very vivid image of what life looked like during the war. This made it interesting and fun to read. For most of the book, the mother narrates the story of her own life to her daughter, where we see her struggling to be a good wife in a horrible marriage, all while living in a war-shaken China. Because both mother and daughter have lived lives full of secrecy up to this point, the mother's openness helps Pearl to see her mom and the way she behaves in an entirely new light. The change in the relationship between mother and daughter evokes deep thought, but I don't believe a book will be very interesting if it consists only of a compacted form of gushing emotions. A certain amount of factual support is needed. For this reason, I felt the addition of Chinese history and culture found in the novel give it a necessary spice. Amy Tan's excellent writing makes her book something really special. A touching story and interesting facts run together charmingly, creating a novel that transcends all time. Although many of the events in the book now seem historical, the theme of a reuniting family is generally very dependable; this was definitely the case for Amy Tan. This story, with its lovable characters and their hardships, is easy for people to relate to now, and will continue to mean a lot to readers in the future. I would say that the novels was, by all means, a huge success.
Worth reading, but Tan has written better July 24, 2008 The Kitchen God's Wife reminded me of The Bonesetter's Daughter in that it was much about mothers, daughters, secrets, and life in China before immigrating to America.
The book tells the story of Winnie, a young girl who survives a harrowing childhood and then a disastrous marriage in war-torn China. Winnie eventually immigrates to America and then keeps her life in China a secret from her daughter, Pearl. The course of the novel follows Winnie as she tells her daughter all of her secrets and the two become closer.
While I enjoyed The Kitchen God's Wife, and I think it is worth reading, it was difficult to absorb at times. For one, Winnie's first marriage, to an abusive coward named Wen Fu, was frustrating at times. I understand that a woman's place in 1940s China was very limited, but I couldn't help feeling that Winnie was so worried about shame and being impolite that she wouldn't do what was necessary to save herself and her children. In many ways, I felt that she allowed herself to be taken advantage of, and it was difficult to read about that.
Secondly, I wouldn't recommend reading this novel in close proximity to The Bonesetter's Daughter. The two stories are too similar. Of the two, I think I liked The Bonesetter's Daughter better, because I felt the female characters were a bit stronger.
Riveting, inspiring and educational March 12, 2008 My wife and I will often read a novel to each other if it has plenty of drama, and tells a great story. The Kitchen God's Wife is such a story! The novel starts off slow but interesting, and as the end nears it becomes harder and harder to put down.
Most of the narrative is anchored around Winnie Louie's revelation of her secret and tumultuous family history to her daughter, Pearl Louis Brandt. Pearl has a secret too - she has MS and doesn't want to tell her mother. The two open up after prodding from Helen, who becomes concerned about taking secrets to the grave after being diagnosed with a benign brain tumor. But, the biggest secret of all isn't revealed until the very end of the book... and I don't want to spoil the ending.
Winnie describes a childhood of rejection - first by her mother and father and then aunts and uncles. After that she endures a brutal marriage to a man named Wen Fu, and eventually escapes to a new life in the USA. Through it all Winnie's spirit and determination survive intact. Also woven into the story are insights into Chinese culture and history, so the novel is at once educational, inspiring, and riveting.
Savory! March 1, 2008 Tan's second book is The Kitchen God's Wife. Like the Joy Luck Club, the storyline revolves around issues of mother-daughter relationships, family obligations, immigrant life, and a dark and meaningful secret's power to shaped lives. Tan says that this book was an attempt to write her mother's "true story," although in a fictionalized way. Apparently in the Joy Luck Club, she was only testing the waters. Now we are onto some really powerful stuff.
As cousin Bao-Bao's wedding draws near, Winnie realizes she must let the family skeletons out of the closet for Pearl's benefit, before family friend Helen does it for her. Not only does Winnie and Helen's shared past contain powerful information that is most appropriately given from mother to daughter, Winnie fears the ways in which Helen has remembered the events differently.
Winnie is tired of the old secrets and lies that have become reality. No longer worried that she will be deported and sent back to a horrible fate in the homeland, Winnie tells Pearl her story. As Amy Tan said during the Shanghai Literary Festival, "things that have the power to destroy also have the power to heal." As the secrets unfold, this tale becomes a highly engaging, intricate web of beautifully written stories within a story.
I tried to read it as slowly as possible so I could savor every nuance of this wonderful book!
Beautiful but uninspiring January 12, 2008 I absolutely loved Amy Tan's "The Joy Luck Club". As an Asian-American myself, I found it to be a beautiful and genuine telling of cultural and familial challenges faced by immigrants. Therefore, I started "Kitchen God's Wife" with high hopes.
Many things are similar between the two novels. Both are filled to bursting with rich, lyric writing. You can taste the sweetness of the rice cakes and frown at the smell of industrial smoke in Amy Tan's China and America. Both introduce compelling family stories of wrestling with cultural differences and the damages of war.
However, that's where the similarities end. "Kitchen God's Wife" takes the wry cynicism in "Joy Luck Club" and fills the whole story with a sense of constant depression populated with utterly uninspiring characters. The main female character begins the story in the dark about her daughter's secrets and spends the rest of her flashback describing how lost and helpless she always felt. Male character #1 begins the story pompous and irritating and descends into monstrous over the course of 200 pages. Male character #2 is unbelievably perfect and never deviates from his predictable course of knight in shining armor.
The story has no development, no climax, and no resolution. I know nothing about the characters at the end of the story that I didn't know 50 pages in. Unfortunately, this made even the female character's most heartbreaking experiences feel boring and predictable.
This story had a lot of potential, and I was sad that it fell so short of expectations.
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