The Opposite of Fate: Memories of a Writing Life by Amy Tan

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: September 2004
  • 416pp
  • Sales Rank: 142,716
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2004
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Paperback, 416pp
    • Sales Rank: 142,716

    Synopsis

    Novelist Tan (The Joy Luck Club, among others) presents a non- fiction work sharing her personal philosophy of fate and talking about her life and work. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

    The New York Times

    The cunning willfulness of memory is a powerful refrain in this book. Tan considers how she, like her mother, became frozen in one frame of time, a slave to her own punishing recollections. In ''Scent,'' she relates how one whiff of a gardenia would plunge her into the ''unbearable grief'' of the year in her midteens when the living room was twice filled with funeral sprays after both her father and brother died of brain tumors. Now, she says, she is submerging those black memories into others of ''an earlier time, of happy expectations,'' when the scent of a gardenia meant ''prom nights and first kisses.'' —Deborah Mason

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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

    This book makes me think about my mom...by Anonymous

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    April 11, 2009: I found myself laughing out loud while reading some of Tan's writing. I love that she gives very clear and personal details. I imagine the situations as I read them. I have a Korean mom and Tan's writing makes me think about my mom :) And the humorous clashes between my Eastern and Western culture and upbringing. I love this book!

    way different than any memoirs I've ever read....by Anonymous

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    May 27, 2005: If you love Amy Tan, read this. If you don't know Amy Tan, read her books! This review is brief, because the others are so long. All I can say is, start reading Amy Tan and read her memoirs--you'll be delighted.


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