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Cargando... Typical American (Vintage Contemporaries) (1991 original; edición 2008)por Gish Jen
Información de la obraTypical American por Gish Jen (1991)
500 Great Books by Women (260) AP Lit (341) Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Jen tracks the assimilation of a Shanghainese immigrant, Yifeng (Ralph) Chang, to the United States in the 1940s and 1950s (possibly 1960s as well). It is a rather unsympathetic look, as Chang gets taken in by a fellow immigrant and conman, Grover. Although Ralph is the protagonist, Jen's real focus is on women: his sister, Theresa, and wife, Helen, whose lives are perhaps constrained in a different way in the United States than they were in Shanghai. The lives of this family are told in very short chapters in a third-person, detached sort of way. Although the novel is a bit cynical and dark about the American dream, it is overall fairly melancholy, as Ralph reflects of the wreckage of their lives. For some reason Jen's style did not mesh with me, and overall I was just as detached from these characters as the Jen's narrator. ( ) Yifeng, the only son in a Chinese family, goes to the United States to study engineering, with plans to return to China. After the Communist takeover in China, Yifeng, now known as Ralph, is unable to return to China. He is reunited with his older sister, Theresa, and together they make a new, typically American, life. This is both a family story and a character study. The family unit of Ralph, Theresa, and Ralph’s wife, Helen, is central to the novel, and the story would be incomplete without any one of them. The author’s quirky writing style resonated with me, and I look forward to reading more of her work, maybe with a reading group. Quiet young Chinese boy,, Yifeng, with big ears, moves to U.S. and becomes Ralph, in a tedious tale of predictable failure and adultery. As bad is Ralph accepting a job slaughtering innocent animals with zero sensitivity. Slacker landlord Pete evolves into "Typical American." Theresa, Helen, Mona, and Callie carry the day. Pretty well-written. In terms of immigrant literature, it's definitely better than say, Amy Tan. I'd give the first half of the story (up until Ralph changes careers) 4 stars and the second half three stars. I don't know if that actually has anything to do with the quality of the novel, or if it's just me being impatient and restless and trying to finish the book as fast as possible (which I do with basically every novel). The second half also has some more predictable elements: affairs, car accidents, etc. All these, of course, are part of the human experience, but idk, it's just so...TYPICALLY AMERICAN, YOU SAY? LOL, okay so maybe that was the point. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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The Chang family comes to the United States with no real intention of staying; however, when the Communists take over China in 1949, Ralph Chang begins to look at the American dream in a whole new light. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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