Ebook Download , by Lucy Tan

by - Mei 01, 2013

Ebook Download , by Lucy Tan

As we mentioned in the past, the modern technology helps us to always realize that life will certainly be consistently less complicated. Reviewing e-book , By Lucy Tan behavior is additionally one of the perks to obtain today. Why? Innovation can be utilized to supply guide , By Lucy Tan in only soft documents system that can be opened up whenever you really want as well as anywhere you need without bringing this , By Lucy Tan prints in your hand.

, by Lucy Tan

, by Lucy Tan


, by Lucy Tan


Ebook Download , by Lucy Tan

Checking out is a pastime to open the expertise windows. Besides, it can provide the motivation as well as spirit to encounter this life. By in this manner, concomitant with the modern technology development, several business offer the e-book or publication in soft data. The system of this publication certainly will be much easier. No concern to fail to remember bringing guide. You could open the device and obtain guide by on-line.

When you require a publication to check out currently, , By Lucy Tan can be an option because this is just one of the upgraded publications to review. It makes sure that when you have new point to think about, you require inspirations to address t. and when you have time to read, the books turn into one option to take. Even this book is considered as brand-new publication, many individuals put their trust funds on it. It will recognize you to be among them that are falling in love to read.

What connection to the reading publication activity is from the book, you can see and recognize how the regulation of this life. You will see how the others will certainly look to others. And will certainly see how the literary works is produced for some enjoyable definition. , By Lucy Tan is just one of the works by someone that has such sensation. Based on some realities, it will certainly ensure you to open your mind and think with each other about this subject. This publication appearance will certainly aid you making better principle of thinking.

It's no any kind of mistakes when others with their phone on their hand, as well as you're as well. The difference might last on the material to open , By Lucy Tan When others open the phone for talking and speaking all things, you could often open up and review the soft file of the , By Lucy Tan Naturally, it's unless your phone is readily available. You can likewise make or wait in your laptop computer or computer that relieves you to read , By Lucy Tan.

, by Lucy Tan

Product details

File Size: 2513 KB

Print Length: 336 pages

Publisher: Little, Brown and Company (July 10, 2018)

Publication Date: July 10, 2018

Language: English

ASIN: B0776RC3DD

Text-to-Speech:

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Word Wise: Enabled

Lending: Not Enabled

Screen Reader:

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#30,450 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

As a second generation Asian-American, so much of this novel resonated with me. I've already read it cover-to-cover twice now, and will come back to it again when I'm in the mood for some seriously good writing and story, probably accompanied by a glass of wine and dark chocolate.This book tells the story of a family—Lina, Wei, their adolescent daughter, Karen—moving back to Shanghai for Wei’s marketing career after two decades of living in the U.S. One summer, Wei’s brother comes to visit and Lina hires a housekeeper/babysitter named Sunny to free up her time to act as hostess. This premise sets up a book that’s essentially character studies of people from different economic classes forced to live and interact within the confines of a single, well-staffed apartment building (Lanson Suites), all the while lying, hiding, evading, pining, and confronting one another with the deftness of any Edith Wharton character.The three narrators—Lina, Wei, Sunny—represent the spectrum of complicated feeling I also have for modern day China and my place in it. There’s the nostalgia for the homeland of my parents and grandparents (where I’ve also spent many summers and college vacations), the flattery of being considered “upper class” simply by having lived in the U.S., the disgust for the myriad of pretensions of the rich, and above all—the search for a life with meaning when you feel displaced by both home and culture.My favorite character in the book was Lina; without giving away spoilers, I loved her flawed personality, her private reflections, even her outward chilliness towards her husband and so-called friends in her “breakfast club”. She’s proud and guarded, a snob of the nouveau riche variety, but money isn’t the thing she seeks—it’s love, that elusive thing so hard to come by regardless of social class. So much of this novel explores what our cultural definition of love is (lust? trust? companionship?) through Lena’s regrets for her past choices, but also, in a fascinating character arc, through the housekeeper, Sunny’s, journey to decide if she wants to throw her lot in with a “good-enough” man, or try to make it on her own. It’s seeing these characters evolve and change through their small, everyday decisions (that bear such lasting consequences!) that provides the greatest pleasures of this novel.Tan’s writing is so wonderfully understated and clean. There isn’t a whiff of the pretensions found in other debut authors. She writes with absolute control and precision. If you pick out any one sentence from the novel, it almost reads Hemingway-esque in its plainness, and yet together, there’s a such a beauty to its spareness that I can only imagine the work that must of gone into achieving such restraint. It's the kind of book where I can flip to any page and immediately be absorbed within a matter of seconds. Do yourself a favor and spend a weekend with this, if only for the wonder of reading that incredible last sentence!

When I read this passage at the end of the Prologue, I knew I was in for a real treat. "America had six time zones. Lina's father called it the land of dreams, and so it seemed. For what other country would aspire to occupy the past, present and future all at the same time?".I finished the novel in two days and came to care deeply for the characters especially Wei and Lina. The author's keen observations and beautiful writing kept you enthralled as she explored universal human issues such as longing and regret. I highly recommend the book.

A poignant and heartwarming tale that takes the reader on a family's journey from rural China to modern day Shanghai, uncovering truths from their past, and discovering what ties them all together. What We Were Promised is an eloquent and wonderfully written gem of a novel. Eagerly anticipating any future publications by Lucy Tan!

Tl;dr: An unflinching, gorgeously writtenlook at expat life through the view of a Chinese couple returning to China and the woman they hire to watch their daughter. You can be at home and yet never be there like you want to be.What We Were Promised is exquisitely written and traces the consequences of leaving home, and how whether it's for another country or simply another place means that the gulf between what you knew and who you've become can make you a stranger to what you thought you'd always know, be it your future, your family, or even your own heart.Through Lina, Sunny, Wei, and Quiang, Ms. Tan weaves a story that begins in the late 1980s and spans to the present, tracing how Lina and Wei left China for America, their return to Shanghai, and how the reunion with Wei's younger brother, Quiang, unfolds over the span of about a week. In that time, Sunny, who is a maid in the building where Lina and Wei live, is hired by Lina to be an Ayi, a sort of companion/nanny to their daughter, Karen.China's culture was indelibly marked by Mao's Great Leap Forward, and the ripples of that are in What We Were Promised as well.I think some readers may find it difficult to relate to Lina, but I loved her. She's a woman who is now a product of two cultures, but yearns for what she's lost--or rather, what she thinks she has.Sunny was fascinating--a woman who yearns for more, even as she's unsure not if she can have it, but if she should, and if so, should she try? The last scene with her broke me more than a little.Thought provoking and nuanced, this is the kind of novel that stays with you. Most definitely for fans of Ha Jin (especially his novel Waiting) and, I think for anyone who has ever yearned to return to somewhere or someone only to learn that nothing and no one is ever constant.I did receive an ARC, but also own the book, and eagerly look forward to Ms. Tan's next work.

Lucy Tan’s novel WHAT WE WERE PROMISED is a story about dreams. Dreams that come true and dreams that don’t. Dreams that do come true often are not always dreamy. A young Chinese couple, who have been promised to each other by their parents, who have both grown up in a rural village, go to America as their parents hoped. They return to China, this time to Shanghai, but re-entry is much different than they expected.With more money, a good education, their new lives sound so promising. But what have they given up? Family is sacred but in their new reality, is it?Such a touching, troubling story. Characters who feel so lonely and achingly real.

The writing is superb and the character building flawless. I love how this book talks about China's past, the glittery present-day Shanghai and the difficult subject of Chinese politics without feeling lecturing at all. This book is really easy to read and the main story about love, family, and redemption is very well written too. But the setting of modern China as if we were there, between the pages, if really what I liked the most.

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