Friday, August 13, 2010

Shanghai Girls by Lisa See

I am conflicted about Lisa See. I think she excels in writing about places and time periods, but isn’t so good at creating original characters. The sisters in Shanghai Girls have a relationship that is clichéd and predictable. The dialogue is almost painfully banal. Yet the settings (1930’s Shanghai, 1940’s and ‘50’s Los Angeles) are great, very evocative and filled with detail. This book follows the fortunes of sisters Pearl and May, who make their living working in Shanghai as advertising models, or so-called “beautiful girls.” When their father suffers business reversals he marries them off to the sons of one of his creditors and the girls must leave Shanghai and join their Chinese-American husbands in California where they will work as low-wage labor for their father-in-law. But before they can leave, the Japanese invade Shanghai, forcing Pearl and May to flee with their mother to Hong Kong and make their way by a long circuitous route to the U.S. Their lives in the U.S. are quite a come-down from their affluent pre-war lives. Their husbands are poor and the sisters work long grinding hours in Chinatown. Is this why See must insert maudlin platitudes about how the bond between sisters is unbreakable, despite all adversity, blah blah blah?

Despite my complaints about the characterizations and relationships, I found this book really interesting and entertaining. I loved reading about the 1940’s incarnation of Chinatown in Los Angeles, a neighborhood built not for immigrants but as a tourist attraction and designed by Hollywood set designers. Pearl and May work in this pretend city and therefore are forbidden to wear western-style clothes, lest they disappoint the white visitors who come for the food and the rickshaw rides.

Lisa See has compiled a great set of photographs on Flickr, of Chinatown, Shanghai, and Chinese advertising posters featuring beautiful girls like Pearl and May. Here is the link.

(Book 36, 2010) 

9 comments:

Sue SL said...

I just may have to give this a read. I'm glad you're posting on FB, so I think to read your reviews!

Anonymous said...

Saw this at the bookstore at the airport. Was interested but perhaps you've talked me out of it. Was thinking it may be the Chinese "Memoirs of a Geisha", but maybe not.

LizF said...

I thought this started well and I really wanted to like it but I'm afraid I got bogged down in the second half and ended up abandoning it because I had limited reading time and time limits on other books (plus the library wanted it back).
I've like other books by Lisa See so I don't know whether to get it again and have another go.
Your post makes me think that the answer should be yes!

Serena said...

I really enjoyed this book, though I do see what you mean about the bonds between sisters, etc. I really think I was swept up in the settings, etc.

Shelley said...

1930's are the setting for my work (but Texas, not Shanghai!)--and I appreciate the careful analysis of being conflicted that you make in this analysis of See's novel.

kaye said...

Followed you on Twitter. keep up the good work!

Mrs. Q: Book Addict said...

I really loved Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, and Shanghai Girls. I couldn't finish Peony in Love, I only got about half way through.

Barbara C. said...

Yes, Shanghai Girls was rated high on my finished books this year. Thanks for the pictures on Flicker.

Anonymous said...

hey, can anybody give me the plot, setting, and a brief explination of the bok? PLEASE??

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