
Good Chinese Wife
A Love Affair with China Gone Wrong
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

June 30, 2014
A well-intentioned though hasty marriage to a less-than-forthright mainland Chinese man turns sour in this prickly memoir by freelance Chicago journalist Blumberg-Kason. Bowled over by an attractive ethnomusicologist she met in the early 1990s while studying as a graduate student at the University of Hong Kong, the author, then 24 (a “Midwestern wallflower” from a Jewish family in Evanston, Ill.), found the attentions of Cai, a 30-something scholar from Wuhan, China, irresistible. He was handsome, unusually tall, and had a young child from a former marriage. Soon Blumberg was tutoring Caion his English papers most evenings and agreeing to marriage. The Chinese don’t really date, he told her. “Do you have any bad habits?” was his courting question. While Blumberg-Kason’s faults included a lack of self-knowledge and self-confidence, Cai’s turned out to be a fondness for porn and an (insinuated but never quite proved) homosexual affair that gave her an unexplained STD. Moving from Wuhan to San Francisco, the couple stumbled over cultural biases on both sides: in China she balked at primitive shower and toilet facilities, while in California he found America had no culture, “no meaning.” This is a belabored story, overstuffed with detail, but it inspires little sympathy for either spouse.

June 15, 2014
An American freelance journalist's painful account of how a hasty marriage to a Chinese man turned her life upside down.Blumberg-Kason was a "shy Midwestern wallflower" going to graduate school in Hong Kong when she met her future husband. With his intelligence, confidence and movie-star looks, Cai seemed a dream come true. He engaged her as his English tutor and, a few months later, declared his desire to date and marry her. The author assented, blind to what it would mean to become the wife of a Chinese man she barely knew. Before the pair even married, Cai's parents told her they would take care of the baby they had not yet had-with or without her. Immediately after the wedding, the formerly "gentle" Cai was "more interested in watching porn than being with [her]." His bad behavior only worsened, as he became moody, demanding and verbally abusive. Believing that Cai's outbursts were simply the result of a need to acclimate to married life, Blumberg-Kason resolved to "dance [her] way around future eruptions." But their relationship grew even more riddled with problems, one of which involved a too-close-for-comfort relationship between Cai and one of his male professors. Lonely and unable to tolerate the social and interpersonal norms of mainland Chinese culture, Blumberg-Kason moved to San Francisco with her husband. But the perfect life she still dreamed of eluded her. Even the author's longed-for baby became a source of cross-cultural conflict between her and her husband. Dissatisfied with American life, Cai demanded that their son go back to China with him. Only then did Blumberg-Kason realize that accommodating her husband would cause her to lose the one thing that had redeemed an otherwise dysfunctional marriage.While the story sometimes reads like an intercultural soap opera, it is the author's courage to face her mistakes that makes the book worthwhile.
COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
دیدگاه کاربران