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Book Description
A riveting memoir of a girl's painful coming-of-age in a wealthy Chinese family during the 1940s.
A Chinese proverb says, "Falling leaves return to their roots." In Chinese Cinderella, Adeline Yen Mah returns to her roots to tell the story of her painful childhood and her ultimate triumph and courage in the face of despair. Adeline's affluent, powerful family considers her bad luck after her mother dies giving birth to her. Life does not get any easier when her father remarries. She and her siblings are subjected to the disdain of her stepmother, while her stepbrother and stepsister are spoiled. Although Adeline wins prizes at school, they are not enough to compensate for what she really yearns for -- the love and understanding of her family.
Following the success of the critically acclaimed adult bestseller Falling Leaves, this memoir is a moving telling of the classic Cinderella story, with Adeline Yen Mah providing her own courageous voice.
Amazon.com
Chinese Cinderella is the perfect title for Adeline Yen Mah's compelling autobiography in which, like the fairy-tale maiden, her childhood was ruled by a cruel stepmother. "Fifth Younger Sister" or "Wu Mei," as Yen Mah was called, is only an infant when her father remarries after her mother's death. As the youngest of her five siblings, Wu Mei suffers the worst at the hands of her stepmother Niang. She is denied carfare, frequently forgotten at school at the end of the day, and whipped for daring to attend a classmate's birthday party against Niang's wishes. Her father even forgets the spelling of her name when filling out her school enrollment record. In her loneliness, Wu Mei turns to books for company: "I was alone with my beloved books. What bliss! To be left in peace with Cordelia, Regan, Gonoril, and Lear himself--characters more real than my family... What happiness! What comfort!" Even though Wu Mei is repeatedly moved up to grades above those of her peers, it is only when she wins an international play-writing contest in high school that her father finally takes notice and grants her wish to attend college in England. Despite her parent's heartbreaking neglect, she eventually becomes a doctor and realizes her dream of being a writer.
Teens, with their passionate convictions and strong sense of fair play, will be immediately enveloped in the gross injustice of Adeline Yen Mah's story. A complete glossary, historical notes on the state of Chinese society and politics during Yen Mah's childhood, and the legend of the original Chinese Cinderella round out this stirring testimony to the strength of human character and the power of education. (Ages 10 to 15)
--Jennifer Hubert
From Publishers Weekly
Mah revisits the territory she covered in her adult bestseller, Falling Leaves, for this painful and poignant memoir aimed at younger readers. Blamed for the loss of her mother, who died shortly after giving birth to her, Mah is an outcast in her own family. When her father remarries and moves the family to Shanghai to evade the Japanese during WWII, Mah and her siblings are relegated to second-class status by their stepmother. They are given attic rooms in their big Shanghai home, they have nothing to wear but school uniforms, and they subsist on a bare-bones diet while their stepmother's children dine sumptuously. Mah finds escape from this emotionally barren landscape at school, but the academic awards she wins only enrage her jealous siblings and stepmother, and she is eventually torn from her auntAher one championAand shipped off to boarding school. That Mah eventually soars above her circumstances is proof of her strength of character. The author recreates moments of cruelty and victory so convincingly that readers will feel almost as if they're in the room with her. She never veers from a child's sensibility; the child in these pages rarely judges the actions of those around her, she's simply bent on surviving. Mah easily weaves details of her family's life alongside the traditions of China (e.g., her grandmother's bound feet) and the changes throughout the war years and subsequent Communist takeover. This memoir is hard to put down. Ages 12-up. (Sept.)
From School Library Journal
Grade 6 Up-This absorbing autobiography tells the story of an unwanted child in upper-class 1940s China. Because her mother died at her birth, Wu Mei (Fifth Younger Sister, renamed Adeline) was a "bad luck" daughter, never forgiven by her father or her four older siblings. When she was a year old, her father remarried. Her Eurasian stepmother produced two more children, who became the favored ones. Wu Mei's efforts to attract her father's attention by consistent top marks at school were ignored and ridiculed except by her Aunt Baba, who shared a similar outcast status in the family. Her aunt's constant affection and encouragement provided the only relief to the girl's daily humiliation and emotional abuse. Determined to separate the two, her parents sent the 11-year-old to boarding school. This was 1948; the Communists were consolidating their power. Soon she was the only student left, abandoned and forgotten by her parents when they fled to Hong Kong. Luckily, an aunt rescued her and returned her to her unwelcoming family. There, enrolled in another Catholic school, she finally gained her father's permission to study in England. Mah has told this story before, in her best-selling autobiography, Falling Leaves (Wiley, 1998). This version for younger readers is more sharply focused, seen through the lens of the story of Ye Xian, a version of the "Cinderella" tale dating back to the ninth century. Fourteen pages of front matter and the slow beginning necessary to introduce the unfamiliar setting may deter some readers, but those who persevere will be rewarded by the rich depiction of a very different world.
Kathleen Isaacs, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DC
From Booklist
"Mama died giving birth to you. If you had not been born, Mama would still be alive." Even though Mama died two weeks after the birth from a fever, this brutal message dooms Wu Mei (Fifth Younger Sister) throughout her sad and lonely childhood in China during the 1940s and 1950s. Wu Mei, whose English name is Adeline, faces the anger and cruelty of her family; only an aunt and frail grandfather are supportive. Shunted off to boarding schools, left out of family activities, Adeline nevertheless thrives academically and hopes desperately (and futily) to please her father. In this young adult version of the author's Falling Leaves, Mah offers a bittersweet look into the pain of childhood and a fascinating glimpse at a tumultuous time in China. Amazingly unscathed by the Communist revolution, her wealthy family heads for Hong Kong after Mao assumes power and resumes its privileged lifestyle. There are moments of clumsiness, as when Adeline verbalizes her distress in ways young people probably would not: "And if I should be so lucky as to succeed one day, it will be because you believed in me," she tells her grandfather. But this is a captivating read because we care so much about the heroine and her future.
Anne O'Malley
Book Dimension
length: (cm)17.3 width:(cm)10.7
大半天读完。自传题材,unwanted主题,这种痛非锦衣玉食能填补的。少儿读物,是因为人物个性勾勒比较扁平,非黑即白,非善即恶。 倘若人性有那么简单就好了,都可以生活在一个fairyland。
评分After finish this book the first idea come out of my mind is' knowledge upgrades one's life' . This is a real story bases on the author's life experience. Actually her family was much richer than many people's in that period, but she had a miserable childho...
评分大半天读完。自传题材,unwanted主题,这种痛非锦衣玉食能填补的。少儿读物,是因为人物个性勾勒比较扁平,非黑即白,非善即恶。 倘若人性有那么简单就好了,都可以生活在一个fairyland。
评分After finish this book the first idea come out of my mind is' knowledge upgrades one's life' . This is a real story bases on the author's life experience. Actually her family was much richer than many people's in that period, but she had a miserable childho...
评分大半天读完。自传题材,unwanted主题,这种痛非锦衣玉食能填补的。少儿读物,是因为人物个性勾勒比较扁平,非黑即白,非善即恶。 倘若人性有那么简单就好了,都可以生活在一个fairyland。
这本书的结构设计简直是一场精妙的迷宫游戏。作者巧妙地运用了时间跳跃和多重视角的穿插叙事,使得原本可能平铺直叙的故事充满了悬念和张力。有时候,你会以为自己已经掌握了故事的全貌,但紧接着,一个未曾料到的闪回或者另一人物的内心独白就会彻底颠覆你之前的判断。这种叙事上的“欺骗”并非故弄玄虚,而是为了更深刻地揭示“真相”的复杂性——即真相往往是被多重偏见和记忆碎片所遮蔽的。我尤其欣赏作者在处理高潮部分的手法,它不是那种爆炸性的、一蹴而就的释放,而是一种逐渐累积、直到压力无法承受时才发生的内爆,其效果比单纯的外部冲突更为震撼人心。翻到最后一页时,我感到一种释然,但这种释然并非意味着所有问题都已解决,而是主角最终与自己的内心达成了和解。这本书就像一首结构复杂但旋律优美的交响乐,需要我们耐心跟随每一个声部的起伏,才能领略到整体的宏伟和精妙之处。
评分坦白说,初接触这类题材时,我曾担心会陷入某种刻板印象的窠臼,但这本书却出乎意料地带来了耳目一新的体验。它的叙事脉络是如此的流畅自然,如同溪水潺潺,看似没有宏大的波澜,却暗藏着不可阻挡的向前推力。作者对细节的捕捉达到了令人惊叹的程度,无论是食物的气味、衣物的触感,还是空气中湿度的变化,都得到了细致入微的描摹,这极大地增强了故事的沉浸感。更令人赞叹的是,作者没有将主人公塑造成一个完美的受害者形象,她有着明显的缺点,也有着不合时宜的固执,正是这些不完美,才使得她的成长和最终的觉醒显得如此真实可信。她的每一步挣扎,都像是我们每个人在面对困境时,内心深处那些微小的、不为人知的搏斗的写照。这本书的魅力在于它的“可连接性”,它让你在读故事的同时,不断地将自己的经历投射其中,产生强烈的共鸣。这是一种高级的叙事艺术,它既完成了故事本身的闭环,又在读者心中开启了无限的对话空间。
评分从文学风格上来说,这本书展现出一种融合了现代主义的疏离感和古典主义的坚实叙事骨架的独特气质。它探讨的主题非常宏大——关于身份的构建、个体在集体期望中的迷失与重塑——但作者却始终将焦点锁定在极小的、私密的瞬间。比如,某次下雨天里,主人公望着雨水打湿窗户的那个冗长片段,作者用极简的词汇,却描摹出了天地苍茫、个体渺小的哲思。这种“以小见大”的笔法,使得沉重的议题变得可消化,更具人情味。此外,作者对“沉默”的处理也堪称一绝。那些没有说出口的话,那些被压抑的渴望,在文本中产生的张力,远胜于任何激烈的争吵。读者需要留心那些停顿、那些省略号背后的潜台词,才能真正进入作者构建的情感迷宫。这本书是一次对阅读耐心的考验,但回报是丰厚的,它提供的不是一个简单的答案,而是一套更高级的提问方式,促使读者去审视自己生命中那些未被充分审视的角落。
评分这部作品的文学价值,在于它对特定时代背景下社会阶层流动的深刻探讨,它以一种近乎冷峻的客观性,撕开了光鲜外表下的残酷现实。作者的语言风格是那种老派的、沉稳的大气,每一个句子都经过了精心的打磨,仿佛是工匠精心雕刻的石碑,厚重且富有力量感。它并没有采取过于煽情的笔调来渲染苦难,反而通过对日常琐事的冷静白描,让那种深入骨髓的无力感自然地渗透出来。我尤其注意到,作者在构建配角群像时所下的功夫,那些看似次要的角色,无一不是活生生的个体,他们各自带着自己的道德困境和生存逻辑,共同构筑了这个复杂的故事生态系统。这种群像描写的功力,使得故事的社会批判性得以升华,不再是简单的善恶对立,而是对人性在特定社会结构下的必然反应的哲学思考。阅读过程中,我常常需要停下来,去回味那些充满哲理性的片段,那些话语简练,但意蕴悠长,仿佛可以从中解读出关于权力、关于宿命的诸多隐喻。这本书无疑是需要细细品味的佳作,它不会迎合读者的即时快感,而是要求我们投入时间与心智,去解构其深层的结构与主题。
评分这本书的叙事视角非常独特,作者似乎总能精准地捕捉到人物内心深处那些微小而真实的情感波动。初读之下,我立刻被那种细腻入微的笔触所吸引,仿佛置身于故事所描绘的那个世界,与主角一同呼吸、一同体验那些跌宕起伏的命运。尤其是在描绘家庭关系中那种微妙的权力制衡和情感拉扯时,作者展现了惊人的洞察力。那些看似不经意的对话背后,隐藏着多少未曾言明的期望与挣扎?每一次冲突的爆发都不是突兀的,而是由无数次日常的压抑和误解层层堆叠的结果。我特别欣赏作者处理环境描写的方式,那些景物不再仅仅是背景板,它们成了人物情绪的延伸,例如,当主人公感到被孤立时,窗外的铅灰色天空似乎也一同低垂,这种象征性的运用让文本的层次感倍增。而且,故事的节奏把握得炉火纯青,紧张的情节与温和的回忆片段交替出现,使人既为接下来的发展感到焦灼,又能在舒缓的叙述中获得情感的喘息。读完之后,书中的人物形象依然鲜活地盘桓在脑海里,他们的选择、他们的痛苦,都引发了我们对自身经历的深刻反思。这本书远不止于讲述一个简单的故事,它更像是一面镜子,映照出现代生活中许多被我们忽略的复杂人性。
评分Good stoy
评分给四星吧,书挺好看的,作者文笔很奇妙,代入感很强,不足的就是感觉有点bias了,我觉得没那么惨吧?那个年代那么多人没吃没穿没学上,女主有吃有穿有学上只不过跟当时社会的富人家的孩子比会觉得有点惨而已。(仅个人观点,勿喷。)还是很佩服作者文笔的,会有一种一直想读下去的欲望。
评分很佩服年幼的Adeline,虽然饱受年幼丧母的悲痛与歧视、后母的恶待、父亲的忽视和时代的动荡辗转,但她总是能在坎坷的生活里找到快乐和希望,并通过自己的努力远走英国,去追寻自己想要的生活。本书的故事很鼓舞人心。同时,本书除了记录Adeline不易的童年生活,也从侧面记录了抗日战争时期中国资本家的生活,非常值得一读。
评分sad story..
评分考据癖: 1)创办Shanghai Women's Bank (480 Nanjing Lu)的Grand-aunt名叫严淑和; 2)香港Sacred Heart Canossian School明明是1992年才搬去Caine Rd的,怎么书中1950年代的时候地址就已经是Caine Rd了??难道是作者写书的时候才去查的地址? 3)越读越觉得和爱玲祖师爷的阅历相似。天津出生,上海成长,香港读书,终老美国。都出生富贵之家,都不被继母生父所爱,都和姑姑关系好,都是读书天才,都成了作家。 4)不过是50年代的事,怎么觉得很有年代感?那代人的英文真是杠杠的。想来我和作者出国的年龄是一样的啊!
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