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Women's Fiction
Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China (Abridged)

Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China (Abridged)

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A journey in time
Review: I read this book as I travelled through from Japan to China and through China to Mongolia. I didn't really see a great deal of China and felt that I learnt a lot more from the pages of WILD SWANS. From the first numbing pages that describe the barbarous practice of foot-binding and thoughout the book's long history that spans a century and three female generations, I was hooked and blinded to life outside WILD SWANS. I was wholly absorbed and felt for once that I was being educated at the same time. This is a book for lovers of fiction who feel they should know more about history. A brilliant, moving gritty, chilling saga all the better for being true, and also an enlightening treatise on a century of Chinese Socio-political history.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tragic journey paved with history
Review: I would recommend this book to anyone. It is a sad but beautiful story about womens' struggles during the communist revolution in China. This book contains three generations of stories in one! I was constantly engaged in what was going on.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Informative and repetitive
Review: For anyone interested in learning about China during the Cultural Revolution, this is a very good book. Chang is adept at portraying the mass hysteria fueled by the government that consumed the Chinese people and ruined so many millions of lives. Reading this book, you definitely begin to realize the scope of this 'revolution' and the profound consequences that it had on the people and culture. However, Chang gets very repetitive about a third of the way through the book- after that, you won't miss much by putting it down. She tells us over and over that 'At this point I didn't realize that Mao was wrong. But something seemed not right.' These are not her exact words, but that pretty much sums up the general idea. It feels as though Chang is trying to absolve herself of any participation in the revolution, even though it was so clearly out of her control. Final synopsis: A very well written book, but it loses track of its message. Required reading if you want to learn about the human toll of the Cultural Revolution.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: the best of the chronicles of the Cultural Revolution
Review: Among the growing genre of exposes about China's recent political convulsions, this book outclasses them all: with remarkable depth and beautiful writing, it combines solid history with acute psychological insight. It is an ideal and unflinching introduction for anyone who wants to understand contemporary China. Once I opened this book, I became so absorbed that it was as if my life was put on hold until I could finish it. Nothing, not even Solzhenitzn's Gulag Archipelago, explains the human toll of totalitarianism as well as Chang's book does. A literary masterpiece.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazing story
Review: I read this book right before my 6 week trip to China. It is long - but worth it. The story is unbelievable and just contiues to get better. It gives a clear picture of the lives of many people in China. It was a wonderful history lesson for my western mind!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: How did she survive?
Review: What a fascinating book, and a great introduction to this period in Chinese history. But how did this generation of Chinese children survive the nightmare? If something like this had happened in our country, would we have a generation of responsible adults now? Hell, I barely made it out of junior prom alive.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: China - before, during & after Mao
Review: This is the best memoir about China that I've read (including both "Life and Death in Shanghai" and "Red Azelea", both of which are excellent). The writing is wonderful! But more, the story evolves through 3 generations, from pre-Communist China, through the days leading up to the October 1949 Communist state, the early days of Communist China (including very important, personal factual accounts about the so-called "Great Leap Forward," etc.), through the Cultural Revolution, and into the dawn of post-Mao China. It is written from an almost unique point of view, by a daughter of 2 Communist Party members, both mid-level cadre. The daughter, now living in the West, brings to the memoir a clearly deep and abiding love of China, of the Chinese people. Although she gives credit to the Communist Party for things done right, esp in the early years of the revolution, she also takes dead-on aim at the party's (and esp its highest leaders') acts that caused incredible suffering for tens, hundreds of millions. It is a wonderful book. If you have an interest in Chinese history, in Mao's China, and the dawn of early post-Mao days -- then find this book and read it!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hollyhood Style
Review: I read Wild Swans in 1995. It was a wonderful book, especially appealing to Western readers, because it was dramatic and with Hollywood Style.

I recommend readers who love Wild Swans also read Life and Death in Shanghai, China Blues, Flying High Out of a Tibetan Valley and Daughters of China. It would be interesting to see different styles and read different stories about China during Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hollywood Style, rated high mainly by Westerners
Review: I read Wild Swans in 1995. Since many of my American friends rated this book highly, I tried to read it again two years later, but I could not finish it. Something is missing in the book from a Chinese point of view. Many of my Chinese friends who are all great writers, have the same opinion as mine: it was written in Hollywood style to appeal to Western readers, but it does not appeal to Chinese readers and writers.

I like "Life and Death in Shanghai", "Daughter of China" and "Flying High Out of a Tibetan Valley" better than "Wild Swans". Those three books are true to life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The book that tells all!
Review: This is Jung Chang's greatest work ever been released in the paperback novel industry! It tells the story of 3 women(including chang herself) and their emotional and physical fight for freedom, survival and peace in a disasterious 1930/80's china. This book will put you in tears for a very, very long time like it did to me with inticing chapters about their struggles against the Japanese, famliy troubles, the Kumatangs,The Chinese Communists armies, and what they had to do to fight back and escape.

The most electrofying book in chinese literature entertainment!:)


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