Monday, June 15, 2009
Without Wood and Best Quality Blog
Sunday, June 14, 2009
First JLC Blog
Rules of the Game and Wall Blog
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Two Kinds Blog
Friday, June 12, 2009
tickets
four directions
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Western Skies
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Two Tickets blog
Monday, June 8, 2009
A Pair Of Tickets
Friday, June 5, 2009
Double Face and Tree blog
Thursday, June 4, 2009
w/w and best quality
waiting between the tree's/double face
Magpies
waiting behind the trees/Double face blog
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
A Pair of Tickets
I think this was a satisfying way to end the story, with Jing-Mei telling of her journey to China to meet her long lost half-sisters. Seeing as her mother was absent throughout the book, I think it is nice to wrap it up with her one wish being fulfilled. Jing-Mei goes through a lot of drawn out anticipation and anxiety in this story, not knowing what to say or do when she sees her sisters. She is afraid they will be angry with her for not bringing her mother whom they think is still living. As soon as she meets them, however, something clicks inside them and they just know that she is gone. It was also an interesting experience for her to travel that long distance with her father and have the ability to grow closer to him. I think the parable in the beginning of the section relates to the mothers experiencing raising their children, learning through hard times that you need to let a person live and experience things, but to make sure that as they shed their innocence they must keep happiness in their hearts and never stop laughing. Throughout the book, the mothers have shed their sometimes hidden wisdom to their daughters and watched patiently as they learned. This was an incredible book and I am very glad to have had the opportunity to read it.
Behind the Trees/Double Face
In these two stories, we learn of the hardship both Ying-Ying and Lindo went through before their children were born. In Ying-Ying’s story, she had an arranged marriage when she was young. She never liked the man but knew he was destined to be her husband. A few months after becoming pregnant with a boy, her husband left her after having cheated on her several times. Out of shame and remorse, she chose to abort her baby, never telling anyone. I think this is a very big deal and if her daughter had known even about the botched marriage, it would have changed the way she viewed her mother. In Lindo’s story, she is worried about her daughters upcoming marriage and doesn’t think its going to work out. Her daughter Waverly wants to spend her honeymoon in China, but thinks they will mistake her as a Chinese citizen and not let her back into America. Her mother promptly tells her that they will know she is American before she even opens her mouth. Waverly is disappointed by this notion and blows her mother off. To Lindo’s surprise, she also visited China wearing her “Chinese face” and thought she blended in, but they knew that she too was from America.
Magpies
I found this story to be very intense, filled with lots of charged emotion ranging all over the place. This story let us glimpse into the early life of An-Mei and the mystery behind her mother. We learn that she left with her mother after Popo dies to live in Tiensten and as soon as An-Mei leaves, she becomes dead to her family. This relates a lot to Scar, involving the drama surrounding her mother, personal sacrifice, and the suppression of emotion. An-Mei’s mother was not happy being a concubine for that old man, but she had no other choice. It turns out that her baby she had with Wu Tsing was taken from her at birth and disguised as one of his other wives children. I cannot imagine the heartbreak she felt at this and it is obvious that it hurt her deeply. I also feel that her mother was ashamed in a way for bringing her daughter there to witness the degrading life she lives. Both Scar and Magpies bring about the aspect of hiding one’s sadness because it only feeds upon other’s happiness.