The title character is actually the daughter of the
protagonist and is alive only because her mother dropped her off at a Social
Services center in China. The unwed
mother, Li-Yan, finds herself pregnant at 17, and the baby’s father has
disappeared. In Li-Yan’s culture,
illegitimate infants, as well as twins, are put to death. Li-Yan is a persona-non-grata in in her
community and struggles to find a way to survive on her own. With help from family and friends, she
eventually becomes a successful tea guru.
Meanwhile, an American couple adopts the daughter that Li-Yan abandoned
and names her Haley. We follow her story
as well, and even though it is not as full of adventure as Li-Yan’s, it is in some
ways more compelling. Haley, along with
other Chinese adoptees, suffers from a number of societal issues in that she
does not resemble her parents.
Consequently, the fact of her adoption is obvious. Plus, she is darker and smaller than other
Chinese girls in the States, so that she is not entirely accepted by them,
either. In any case, this novel is quite
predictable and full of unlikely coincidences, but it’s a pleasant enough read,
though certainly not a riveting one.
Again, to me, the discomfort of Asian adoptees in this country was an
emotional issue that I had never considered.
That aspect of the book makes it marginally worth reading, but all of
the pages dedicated to tea growing, drying, fermenting, etc., were not my cup
of…well, you know.
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