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The Joy Luck Club |
List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: Heart-warming story of four mothers and their daughters Review: Amy Tan writes about four mothers struggling through the hard times in life in order to live a better one in the future. The Joy Luck Club formed by four women in China allowed them to share their stories and forget their worries. These four mothers hoped that raising their daughters in America and raising them the American way will give them a more successful life. They hoped that their daughters will learn to take better steps in life, than to take the wrong ones that their mothers have taken in the past. But the relationship between a mother and a daughter is so deep that they learn that a piece of their mother's personality traits will always be with them. And no matter how Americanized a child may be raised, she will still see a Chinese part of herself inside. Amy Tan really has her own style of writing. She includes Mandarin lines which makes it interesting and her book is so detailed that it seems believable and very realistic. Each page is so touching that it makes me want to go onto the next to read what happens after. I would say that this is one of the best books I have read.
Rating: Summary: Ever feel like you're there? Review: I have read and re-read this book over the last five years, and watched the movie many times as well. I have since read everything Amy Tan has written. She pulls me into her world with a power and sensitivity that few writers can match. The mother-daugher relationships are universal in many ways, and the views of their individual lives (especially in the flashbacks to China) are so real, I crave Chinese food every time I read Joy Luck. Granted, this book is not for everyone, and may seem like a "chick book" to men; the stories are convoluted, and if you can't follow flash-forward/flash-back, don't even try to read it. But no matter how you were raised, or where your history is, I think most women can find something true to their life in Joy Luck Club.
Rating: Summary: Gosh, what can I say? . . . WOW! Review: I am only half-way through this book and I have seen the movie four times. It [the movie] was great and made me want to read the book. I had wanted to start it when I was a bit older but I found it in my school library the other day and after reading the first few sentences, I was honestly mesmerized! What a great book!
Rating: Summary: Great insight into human nature, yet often overly confusing Review: The Joy Luck Club has its moments of excellent drama, where you become so entranced in its interpretation of human nature that you almost can't put it down. However, Amy Tan could have excluded some of the characters. Although they all complimented the novel in different ways, they essentially provided the same theme, and only made the book very confusing to follow. I had to go over the chapters several times and I even rented the movie before I was finally able to envision the novel as a whole. I am not one who can concentrate very well with such in-depth books, and I only recommend it for those people. Too bad, though, it was an excellent concept overall.
Rating: Summary: Heartbreak Review: Even chinese culture are sometimes distorted in this book, the stories in this book make me cry. Huge and deep gaps between two generations and two different cultures, what described in this book make me rethink the meaning of time and life.
Rating: Summary: A Wonderful Heart Breaking Story Review: This book is D-E-P-R-E-S-S-I-N-G. Tehre is no other way to describe it. I am only half way through it. It is wonderfully written. I happen to think that the movie is more powerful though. A definite buy. A must read.
Rating: Summary: A wonderful book. Review: The Joy Luck Club is a book that shows Asian and Asian-American life without apology or exaltation. I can easily connect to the Asian-American women who want to be accepted as completely American- there is nothing spoiled or bratty about them feeling that way, not anymore than a Euro-American considering himself completely American. Asians are torn between two cultures in many families, including mine, and it is show rather well in this book. One reader wanted to know why schools are making the students read books with a Chinese-American background like Joy Luck Club and Woman Warrior. The reason is because students up until now have not been exposed to writings by people other than dead Caucasian men or, in a few rare cases, African-Americans. Many Asian-Americans cannot find their image in the media and it is a wonderful thing that schools are trying to remedy this. Joy Luck Club is a beautiful book, beautifully written with a beautiful story. As for the strange pseudo-Confucian sayings that many reviewers have complained about, my father, in fact, does use his "four word proverbs" as he calls them when speaking Chinese to his friends. "Like a tiger between the trees" is one of them. Joy Luck Club speaks to me in ways I can't explain. It touches me and it reaches me. Like Woman Warrior, this is a book that one reads and is haunted by the pure emotion of the tales that each woman tells. This book isn't any more boring, in fact, less than a classic like Pride and Prejudice or Bleak House. And a hell lot more meaningful.
Rating: Summary: A GOOD BOOK! Review: The first time I read this book was when I was 12. Eversince then I was hooked. I read it over and over and it was wonderful. Ms. Tan's words weave and develop the story. It is one of the best books ever. It is so un-boring and it is so interesting to read stories about women.
Rating: Summary: not good, not bad, just different Review: I think the book is very interesting to read and I liked the way Tan portrays her characters. Even though you may find some of them pretty self-centered and lacking any sense of responsibility, you get a very good image of every one of them, and might even feel with some. I also believe it helps to understand people from a different cultural background.
Rating: Summary: horrible dont read Review: i did not like this book. some parts were ok but i had to force my way through it.
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