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    The Hundred Secret Senses by Amy Tan

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    (Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

    • Pub. Date: March 1997
    • 406pp
    • Sales Rank: 32,720
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      • Overview
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: March 1997
      • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 406pp
      • Sales Rank: 32,720

      Synopsis

      The Hundred Secret Senses is an exultant novel about China and America, love and loyalty, the identities we invent and the true selves we discover along the way. Olivia Laguni is half-Chinese, but typically American in her uneasiness with her patchwork family. And no one in Olivia's family is more embarrassing to her than her half-sister, Kwan Li. For Kwan speaks mangled English, is cheerfully deaf to Olivia's sarcasm, and sees the dead with her "yin eyes."

      Even as Olivia details the particulars of her decades-long grudge against her sister (who, among other things, is a source of infuriatingly good advice), Kwan Li is telling her own story, one that sweeps us into the splendor, squalor, and violence of Manchu China. And out of the friction between her narrators, Amy Tan creates a work that illuminates both the present and the past sweetly, sadly, hilariously, with searing and vivid prose.

      "Truly magical...unforgettable...this novel...shimmer[s] with meaning."--San Diego Tribune

      "The Hundred Secret Senses doesn't simply return to a world but burrows more deeply into it, following new trails to fresh revelations."--Newsweek

      Annotation

      Amy Tan's latest effort unfolds a series of family secrets that questions the connection between fate, beliefs, and hopes, memory and imagination, and the natural gifts of our hundred secret senses. Years after her Chinese half-sister assails her with ghost stories set in the mysterious world of Yin, a young woman finds herself in China, looking for a way to reconcile the ghosts of her past with the dreams of her future.

      Newsweek

      Tan has once more produced a novel somewhat like a hologram: turn it this way and find Chinese-Americans shopping and arguing in San Francisco; turn it that way and the Chinese of Changmian village in 1864 are fleeing into the hills to hide from the rampaging Manchus. . . .The Hundred Secret Senses doesn't simply return to a world but burrows more deeply into it, following new trails to fresh revelations.

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      Biography

      With her acclaimed 1989 novel The Joy Luck Club and its successors, Amy Tan succeeded in revealing the Chinese-American sensibility to readers in unprecedented numbers. In mystical, winding prose, she draws the boundaries and commonalities between generations of women who are related, but born worlds apart.

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      Customer Reviews

      An exhilarating story!by Anonymous

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      September 24, 2008: I had so much fun reading this book. It was the first Amy Tan novel I have read. I loved Kwan's character so bubbly and always trying to please and help Libby-ah who was always searching for something more and going about it in a negative way. I also enjoyed Amy Tan's sense of humor. Every so often I would find myself laughing out loud. The ending was sad though Kwan disappearing. It was a great read!

      A reviewerby Anonymous

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      November 05, 2007: Like the most of Amy Tan?s books, The Hundred Secret Senses evolves around two distinctive characters, one being a Chinese-American who does not understand the Chinese culture and custom and the other being a Chinese from China with great pride in being a Chinese. Through out the book, Tan illustrates how these two characters influence each other and how these characters bring alterations in each other?s belief and personality. In the beginning the book seems lame because one of the main characters claims that she can see and talk to ghosts. The meaning behind this claim is revealed later in the novel as the readers discover the author?s message of the novel. The book is long, but it?s easy to read. However if I had free time to read this book again, I will definitely not read it because they only books that I can read over and over is the Harry Potter series, and The Hundred Secret Senses is not amusing as the Harry Potter series. If you liked The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, you will be able to enjoy this book, but I personally like The Joy Luck Club better because it has various stories about different characters that are told from different perspectives. If you are reading this book for Mrs. Kadletz class, just note that the devices for the journal are easy to find, but they are not easy to analyze. You have to think and think in order to analyze them in A.P. level analysis.


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