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The Year of Magical Thinking
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Freakonomics
Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life
My Friend Leonard
Oh the Glory of It All
Never Let Me Go
The History of Love
The Complete Calvin and Hobbes
The World Is Flat
A Man without a Country
The Tender Bar
No Country for Old Men
On Beauty
Encyclopedia Prehistorica Dinosaurs
The Glass Castle
Kafka on the Shore
Black Hole
1491 : New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus
Saturday
The Historian
Mao : The Unknown Story
1776
Animals in Translation
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
God's Politics
Lunar Park
Specimen Days
Teacher Man
Blink
Infrastructure
The Complete New Yorker
Veronica
Six Bad Things
The Areas of My Expertise
Hip Hotels Atlas
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
The March
China, Inc.
Saving Fish from Drowning
The Star Wars Poster Book
Looking At Los Angeles
When I Knew
Mother-Daughter Wisdom
Mother of Sorrows
The Design of Dissent
The Golden Spruce
Eleanor Rigby
Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You
The Algebraist
 
 
 
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View Larger Picture of Saving Fish from Drowning  by Amy  Tan

Saving Fish from Drowning

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Saving Fish from Drowning
by Authors: Amy Tan

Hardcover
Description: Amy Tan, who has an unerring eye for relationships between mothers and daughters, especially Chinese-American, has departed from her well-known genre in Saving Fish From Drowning. She would be well advised to revisit that theme which she writes about so well.

The title of the book is derived from the practice of Myanmar fishermen who "scoop up the fish and bring them to shore. They say they are saving the fish from drowning. Unfortunately... the fish do not recover," This kind of magical thinking or hypocrisy or mystical attitude or sheer stupidity is a fair metaphor for the entire book. It may be read as a satire, a political statement, a picaresque tale with several "picaros" or simply a story about a tour gone wrong.

Bibi Chen, San Francisco socialite and art vendor to the stars, plans to lead a trip for 12 friends: "My friends, those lovers of art, most of them rich, intelligent, and spoiled, would spend a week in China and arrive in Burma on Christmas Day." Unfortunately, Bibi dies, in very strange circumstances, before the tour begins. After wrangling about it, the group decides to go after all. The leader they choose is indecisive and epileptic, a dangerous combo. Bibi goes along as the disembodied voice-over.

Once in Myanmar, finally, they are noticed by a group of Karen tribesmen who decide that Rupert, the 15-year-old son of a bamboo grower is, in fact, Younger White Brother, or The Lord of the Nats. He can do card tricks and is carrying a Stephen King paperback. These are adjudged to be signs of his deity and ability to save them from marauding soldiers. The group is "kidnapped," although they think they are setting out for a Christmas Day surprise, and taken deep into the jungle where they languish, develop malaria, learn to eat slimy things and wait to be rescued. Nats are "believed to be the spirits of nature--the lake, the trees, the mountains, the snakes and birds. They were numberless ... They were everywhere, as were bad luck and the need to find reasons for it." Philosophy or cynicism? This elusive point of view is found throughout the novel--a bald statement is made and then Tan pulls her punches as if she is unwilling to make a statement that might set a more serious tone.

There are some goofy parts about Harry, the member of the group who is left behind, and his encounter with two newswomen from Global News Network, some slapstick sex scenes and a great deal of dog-loving dialogue. These all contribute to a novel that is silly but not really funny, could have an occasionally serious theme which suddenly disappears, and is about a group of stereotypical characters that it's hard to care about. It was time for Amy Tan to write another book; too bad this was it. --Valerie Ryan

Average Customer Rating:

Where did Amy Tan go?

As an AVID Amy Tan fan, I eagerly awaited this book, and was highly dissapointed. I pre-ordered Saving Fish from Drowing from amazon and read it about six months ago. I can't remember anthing about it, so what does that tell you?

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Review of Saving Fish From Drowning

Saving Fish from Drowning was an interesting, thought provoking book. It was different from the Good Luck Club and The Bonesetter's Daughter, other books that I have read of Tam's that dealt more with the Chinese experience in America. I think I was looking for something more in that vein. But that doesn't take away from this latest book which is filled with nail-biting adventure.It is a study of American tourists' total ignorance and insensitivity to cultures of other people, and how this causes an international incident with unexpected repercussions.


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What a disapointment.

This book doesn't not follow the pattern of other books she wrote. I've read all her other books and I love each one. I couldn't wait for her next book and sad to say, this one is a bummer. This book goes on and on about nothing. I couldn't figure out what the story line is. The characters get lost in my mind. Can't figure out who's who.

I hope her next book will follow the same pattern as The Joy Luck Club, Kitchen God's Wife, The Hundred Secret Senses and The Bone setter's Daughter. These books are a must read.

Saving Fish from Drowning, I advise you to skip.

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