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The Bonesetter's Daughter

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The fascination with mother-daughter relationships that captivated readers in Tan’s debut novel continues in her latest, an even more polished and provocative work. Compulsively readable and beautifully structured around three metaphorical themes—bones, ghosts, and ink—this novel explores the lives of three generations of women. It begins in a small Chinese village at the turn of the twentieth century, where a skilled bonesetter defies tradition to teach his daughter. Intelligent and willful, she rejects the marriage proposal of a vulgar coffinmaker, triggering a tragic sequence of events that reverberates a century later in San Francisco. Here, a Chinese American woman reads her mother’s memoir. Although Ruth is a ghostwriter for self-help books, her advice hasn’t fostered genuine intimacy with her boyfriend or helped her cope with her argumentative mother, Luling, who is haunted by the ghost of Precious Auntie. Widowed since Ruth was a toddler, Luling, a calligraphy artist from China, struggles with Alzheimer’s. As Ruth returns home to care for her, she confronts painful childhood memories and uncovers the truth about Precious Auntie, the bonesetter’s daughter, who is her grandmother. Through the stories of these three strong women, Tan weaves vivid Chinese history, explores familial bonds, and celebrates the preservation of family history as an act of love and a path to forgiveness.

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The Bonesetter's Daughter, Amy Tan

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2001
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(Paperback)
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Sprache
Englisch
Autor*innen
Amy Tan
Erscheinungsdatum
2001
Einband
Paperback
Seitenzahl
416
ISBN10
0345446690
ISBN13
9780345446695
Reihe
Erstveröffentlichung
2001
Originaltitel
The Bonesetters Daughter
Bewertung
4 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
The fascination with mother-daughter relationships that captivated readers in Tan’s debut novel continues in her latest, an even more polished and provocative work. Compulsively readable and beautifully structured around three metaphorical themes—bones, ghosts, and ink—this novel explores the lives of three generations of women. It begins in a small Chinese village at the turn of the twentieth century, where a skilled bonesetter defies tradition to teach his daughter. Intelligent and willful, she rejects the marriage proposal of a vulgar coffinmaker, triggering a tragic sequence of events that reverberates a century later in San Francisco. Here, a Chinese American woman reads her mother’s memoir. Although Ruth is a ghostwriter for self-help books, her advice hasn’t fostered genuine intimacy with her boyfriend or helped her cope with her argumentative mother, Luling, who is haunted by the ghost of Precious Auntie. Widowed since Ruth was a toddler, Luling, a calligraphy artist from China, struggles with Alzheimer’s. As Ruth returns home to care for her, she confronts painful childhood memories and uncovers the truth about Precious Auntie, the bonesetter’s daughter, who is her grandmother. Through the stories of these three strong women, Tan weaves vivid Chinese history, explores familial bonds, and celebrates the preservation of family history as an act of love and a path to forgiveness.