Lives of the Family
Stories of Fate and Circumstance
- Publisher
- Random House of Canada
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2014
- Category
- General, Emigration & Immigration, China
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Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780307361240
- Publish Date
- Sep 2014
- List Price
- $21.00
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Where to buy it
Description
International bestselling author of The Concubine's Children, Denise Chong returns to the subject of her most beloved book, the lives and times of Canada's early Chinese families.
In 2011, Denise Chong set out to collect the history of the earliest Chinese settlers in and around Ottawa, who made their homes far from any major Chinatown. Many would open cafes, establishments that once dotted the landscape across the country and were a monument to small-town Canada. This generation of Chinese immigrants lived at the intersection of the Exclusion Act in Canada, which divided families between here and China, and 2 momentous upheavals in China: the Japanese invasion and war-time occupation; and the victory of the Communists, which ultimately led these settlers to sever ties with China.
This book of overlapping stories explores the trajectory of a universal immigrant experience, one of looking in the rear view mirror while at the same time, travelling toward an uncertain future. Intimate, haunting and powerful, Lives of the Family reveals the immigrant's tenacity in adapting to a new world.
About the author
Denise Chong is an award-winning and internationally published author. The Girl In The Picture was a finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Award, as was her memoir, The Concubine’s Children. She lives in Ottawa with her husband and two children.
Editorial Reviews
"The stories are powerful, poignant and personal, but they are also microcosms of the immigrant experience in this country of immigrants." —The Vancouver Sun
"Chong constructs a moving, well-researched . . . view, with windows that open periodically in different places and times, allowing the reader a glimpse of transpacific family life." —Winnipeg Free Press
"True stories that have the resonance and substance of fiction." —Toronto Star
"Chong seamlessly conveys an enormous amount of historical information in compelling narrative tales. Bravo." —The Georgia Straight