Shanghai Girls by Lisa See

NEW FROM BN.COM
  • $15.00 List price
    $10.80 Online Price
    (You Save 28%)
skip to cart

SPEND $25, GET FREE SHIPPING

Pick Me Up

Reserve & pick up in 60 minutes at your local store.

(Paperback)

Reader Rating: (279 ratings)

  • Pub. Date: February 2010
  • 336pp
  • Sales Rank: 1,670

Customers who bought this also bought

  • Overview
  • EditorialReviews
  • CustomerReviews
  • MeetTheWriter
  • Features

Customer Reviews

disappointingby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

I got this book as a birthday gift, it started off well as far as the girls adventures, modeling for calenders and artists etc, but I felt the rape was unneccesary and too taumatizing to read, as well as the details about the surgery because of too much physical damage. It turned me off to read other books from this author in the future.

Insight into Sisterly Loveby SheGeek

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

This book is an excellent study of the emotional bonds that tie sisters together. While the two main characters love each other deeply the reader will gain insight into what types of wedges can also be present in such a relationship. And along the way the reader will learn some things about Chinese culture. You cannot help but be intrigued by all these two women go through. I will admit that the...

Lots of potential...but...disappointing in the endby lola007

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

Lisa See is a good writer who always provides rich descriptions that take readers right to the moment she's describing. Overall, the book is pretty depressing, but demonstrates personal triumph over adversity. The ending is VERY DISAPPOINTING. The book should have been Shanghai Girls: Part One. I couldn't believe it when I clicked to the last page; I thought perhaps the entire book hadn't downloaded....

The essence of sisters through thick and thin!by Timberlake

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

This was a beautifully portrayed story of sisters--very different from one another in so many ways. Through their good and bad days in China and America, they held onto each other and made sacrifices only sisters can understand. Lisa See most assuredly did her job researching the history of both China and Los Angeles during the time period she created. You could feel the sadness, anxiety, and fear...

Nations Acting Badlyby nuee

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

To follow Pearl and May from Shanghai to Los Angeles in 1937 is to track the millions of female victims of wars. As if terror, hunger and danger aren't enough, the women suffer rape and humiliation. They run from Chinese gangs only to encounter the warring Japanese.

Landing in the U.S. offers a new set of challenges: strange food, incarceration, discrimination and the daily frustration of analyzing...


More Customer Reviews

Overview -

Shanghai Girls

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: February 2010
  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
  • Format: Paperback, 336pp
  • Sales Rank: 1,670

Synopsis

For readers of the phenomenal bestsellers Snow Flower and the Secret Fan and Peony in Love a stunning new novel from Lisa See about two sisters who leave Shanghai to find new lives in 1930s Los Angeles

May and Pearl, two sisters living in Shanghai in the mid-1930s, are beautiful, sophisticated, and well-educated, but their family is on the verge of bankruptcy. Hoping to improve their social standing, May and Pearl s parents arrange for their daughters to marry Gold Mountain men who have come from Los Angeles to find brides.

But when the sisters leave China and arrive at Angel s Island (the Ellis Island of the West) where they are detained, interrogated, and humiliated for months they feel the harsh reality of leaving home. And when May discovers she s pregnant the situation becomes even more desperate. The sisters make a pact that no one can ever know.

A novel about two sisters, two...

The New York Times - Janet Maslin

…a broadly sweeping tale that opens in Shanghai in 1937. The detail is thoughtful and intricate

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

Lisa See may not appear to fit the standard conception of a Chinese-American woman, but her deep roots in her Chinese background have set her on a path leading her to being one of the most significant Asian-American voices in contemporary writing.

More About the Author