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The Red Chamber [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Pauline A. Chen

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Book Description

July 10 2012
In this lyrical reimagining of the Chinese classic Dream of the Red Chamber, set against the breathtaking backdrop of eighteenth-century Beijing, the lives of three unforgettable women collide in the inner chambers of the Jia mansion. When orphaned Daiyu leaves her home in the provinces to take shelter with her cousins in the Capital, she is drawn into a world of opulent splendor, presided over by the ruthless, scheming Xifeng and the prim, repressed Baochai. As she learns the secrets behind their glittering façades, she finds herself entangled in a web of intrigue and hidden passions, reaching from the petty gossip of the servants’ quarters all the way to the Imperial Palace. When a political coup overthrows the emperor and plunges the once-mighty family into grinding poverty, each woman must choose between love and duty, friendship and survival.

In this dazzling debut, Pauline A. Chen draws the reader deep into the secret, exquisite world of the women’s quarters of an aristocratic household, where the burnish of wealth and refinement mask a harsher truth: marriageable girls are traded like chattel for the family’s advancement, and to choose to love is to risk everything. 

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf (July 10 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9780307701572
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307701572
  • ASIN: 0307701573
  • Product Dimensions: 16.8 x 3.6 x 24.1 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 703 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #315,779 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

“Pauline Chen’s boldly imagined retelling of The Dream of the Red Chamber is a literary wonder. An epic yet intimate account of palace intrigue and political tumult that dazzles on every page. Heartbreaking, exhilarating, and impossible to put down.”
—Julie Otsuka, author of The Buddha in the Attic
 
“Rarely does a cast of beloved literary figures from another culture and time come alive on the pages of a modern writer’s work. Pauline Chen has reimagined the characters from my very favorite novel to make a compelling new version of China’s great literary masterpiece. I highly recommend The Red Chamber. It will transport you into an altogether new world.” 
—Arthur Golden, author of Memoirs of a Geisha
 
“In Pauline Chen’s transporting interpretation of the Chinese classic The Dream of the Red Chamber, the byzantine machinations and behind-the-screen politics of the Jia family are so skillfully rendered as to bring to mind a delicate ink painting suddenly and vividly brought to life. A remarkable achievement.”
—Janice Lee, author of The Piano Teacher
 
The Red Chamber draws a memorable portrait of the Qing dynasty era, revealing a dangerous world of intrigue and secrets within the entrapping web of societal mores and manners. Written in a precise, cinematic style, Chen's novel brings this fascinating historical period to vivid life.”  
—Dan Chaon, author of Stay Awake

“Fans of historical fiction who appreciate resonant details, unexpected intrigue, and multigenerational plotting will find this work irresistible. With just the right blend of the highbrow literary and guilty summer pulp, Chen just might put this 18th-century classic on 21st-century bestseller lists.” 
Library Journal
 
“A vivid portrait…From the mighty heights to the depths of poverty and despair, the significance of female relationships, friendships, and rivalries are at the forefront of this compelling glimpse into an exotic time and place.”
Booklist
 
“A vivid, lively reimagining…Despite their Eastern origins, Chen’s engaging heroines seem like direct descendants of the doomed, repressed women of classic Western literature.”
Book Page
 
“Leisurely…supple…Chen often touches notes of emotional depth.”
Kirkus Reviews
 
“Ambitious and exquisite…utterly absorbing…sure to astound and enthrall readers up until the very last page. The Red Chamber reads like a Chinese Downton Abbey and is a fitting homage to a beloved masterpiece.”
—Tribute Books
 
“The excesses of Imperial China frame this elegant story of shifting fortunes, power struggles, palace intrigue, betrayal, and love…The Red Chamber takes a long hard look at the complex interconnected desires, ambitions, and conventions that can bind a family together—or tear it apart.”
—The Daily Beast, “Hot Reads”
 
“Moving, startling, and quite beautiful…a welcome, memorable introduction to characters vivid in the imaginations of generations of Chinese readers.”
Cleveland Plain Dealer
 
“Compelling…intricate…thoughtful and provocative…No doubt Chen has provided us with a work that will not only be found on the list of historical classics but also become a part of the lexicon of the greatest love stories in the world.”
8Asians.org

“Here is clearly a work of love and a pleasing introduction to a novel—and a world—that Americans deserve to get to know.”
—The Columbus Dispatch

“The Red Chamber
offers a window into a foreign world…Chen’s framework provides a context for her characters’ actions, as often flawed as they are heroic, that makes things not just knowable but comprehensible.”
—The Denver Post

“Full of lavish details of the palace, sumptuous feasts, and day-day minutiae, levitating whispered conversations overheard by the wrong parties, capricious scheming between family members, and gossip hidden beneath every elegant tapestry and beaded pillow to lofted heights…There’s much to do about more serious matters, too—especially in the latter half of the novel, when political unrest in Beijing threatens to destroy the family’s tenuous hierarchy.”
—Publishers Weekly

“Bold and memorable…Chen retells and recreates in lush detail the daily life inside the Rongguo Mansion, where scandalous secrets and lies are hidden behind a grand façade.”
—Chicago Tribune

New York Daily News
Summer 2012 Must-Reads

About the Author

Pauline A. Chen earned her B.A. in classics from Harvard, her J.D. from Yale Law School, and her Ph.D. in East Asian studies from Princeton. She has taught Chinese language, literature, and film at the University of Minnesota and Oberlin College. She is also the author of a novel for young readers, Peiling and the Chicken-Fried Christmas, and lives in Ohio with her two children.  

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.4 out of 5 stars  73 reviews
29 of 32 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW! An oustanding debut Jun 6 2012
By Nitty's Mom - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review
If not for Amazon Vine program, I might have put this book down after the second chapter, which would have been a huge mistake. The story builds slowly and can initially be confusing due to difficulty remembering the Chinese names, yet this book turned out to be unforgettable.

As the authors note depicts, The Red Chamber is inspired by Cao Xuequin's "Dream of the Red Chamber" a beloved 18th century Chinese novel. The author, Pauline A. Chen, writes "What follows is my attempt to finish the story for myself, while paying homage to this beloved masterpiece and sharing it with a wider audience." What a fascinating story this turns out to be.

When Daiyu's mother, Jia Min dies, her last request is that her daughter return to Beijing, and her family who has disowned her. In Beijing, Daiyu meets the Jia Family and is amazed by the lavish lifestyle they lead. The Jia's are a very influential family due to their connection with the Imperial family of China. At the palace of Rongguo, Daiyu meets her uncle Jia Zheng the Under-Secretary of the Ministry of Works, her calculating and cold grandmother Lady Jia, and her cousins Jia Lian and his wife Wang Xifeng. Most important is the relationship she develops with her charismatic cousin Jia Baoyu. The grieving Daiyu feels an immediate attraction to her cousin which he quickly reciprocates. As was the social custom in 18th century China, the Jias are also living with another influential family the Xues, the widowed sister-in law of Jia Zheng's and her daughter Xue Baochai and son Xue Pan. Baochai has also been enamored with Baoyu, but never confident enough to think she can win his love. When the old emperor is poisoned and a new prince without ties to the Jia family takes the throne, the Jia men are put in jail and the women are forced to fend for themselves and live way below what they had been accustomed.

All the woman characters in the novel are beautifully depicted. Daiyu finds comfort with Baoyu and hopes for a love match like her mother. In a different time the smart and shrewd Wang Xifeng could have run her own business. It is Xifeng who runs the household for the men as they have little interest . When it becomes apparent that Xifeng cannot bear a child, her mother-in-law and husband decide that her childhood servant and friend P'inger will become his concubine. Xue Baochai is the dutiful daughter who looks after her widowed mother and attempts to keep her problematic brother out of trouble. When she decides to fight for what she thinks is hers, she sets the wheels in motion that result in misfortune for many. The male characters are no less inspired. While the woman have little say in their fate, the men of the Jia family do not fare much better, as they are also bound by duty and tradition.

If you enjoyed the one of a kind "Memoirs of A Geisha" you will fall under the spell of these captivating characters and the story they have to tell. This an 18th century love story, fascinating history lesson; a novel on the fortitude of women, and of family loyalty. Very highly recommended.
37 of 44 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars The original is better Jun 12 2012
By Sarah Stegall - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review
Much is made of the fact that Pauline Chen has "reimagined" one of the great novels of Chinese literature, "Dream of the Red Chamber", in this debut novel. I am inclined to skepticism, however, as I would be if someone decided to "reimagine" Chaucer or Shakespeare. For example, none of the original magical, supernatural trappings of "Dream of the Red Chamber" make it into Chen's novel, thereby removing an entire layer of meaning, depth and beauty from her re-imagining of it; this is rather like rewriting "A Midsummer Night's Dream" but leaving out all the fairies. Also missing are the philosophical discussions, the poetry, the intricately braided plots that lend such fascinating complexity to this classic.

I'll grant that Chen had hard choices to make, since the original ending to "Dream of the Red Chamber" is lost, and a tacked-on ending by another author more or less reverses the tale of feudal dissolution that dominates the first half of the novel. Just as "Gone With the Wind" is not just about the romance between Scarlett and Rhett, "Dream of the Red Chamber" is more than a romantic tragedy; it's a sometimes devastating critique of feudal society. But Pauline Chen has dropped almost all of the political and philosophical commentary that makes this 18th century novel so refreshingly contemporary. What remains is a serviceable soap opera, overlaid with the glaze of exotic locale and custom. Move any modern soap opera far enough into the past, and it gains an air of faux respectability or importance that might not accrue to it in a modern setting.

Chen straddles both these approaches by keeping her tale set in 18th century China, but narrating it in the present tense. This bizarre juxtaposition of ancient setting and ultramodern narrative style threw me off very frequently. As it was, I couldn't work up much interest in anyone other than Wang Xifeng, the young wife of an indolent nephew of the master of the house. She was energetic, intelligent, amusing and very capable. Her story, like everyone else's, takes her through good times and bad, through folly and regret. She is the linchpin on which the household turns for most of the book, the one heroine I rooted for consistently. The love story was rather anemic, between a selfish, spoiled young man whose careless love hurts those around him, and a fragile, smart but naive impoverished cousin. Like Romeo and Juliet, they do not end well, but unlike that classic pair, there is virtually no fire, passion or energy to give meaning to their ending. Instead, Chen pulls a rabbit out of the hat in a "twist" ending that only points up how futile all love and passion are. It's an ultimately nihilistic ending that Cao Xueqin would not have recognized.
14 of 18 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Intriguing Journey into Chinese Culture Jun 9 2012
By Addison Dewitt - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review
Pauline Chen's debut novel, "The Red Chamber" is a brilliant premiere entry into the world of literature. The story is gleaned from the classic "Dream of the Red Chamber" by Cao Xuequin but is reinvented with a modern touch, most notably in dialogue. Yet Chen keeps the poetry and imagery of 18th Century China completely in the mix and the result is a masterwork that compares easily with "Raise the Red Lantern" (and surpasses it) and other stories that center around the woman's plight in Chinese culture of that era.

While there are many characters to keep track of and the book starts off a bit unclear, by the 3rd chapter I was hooked and soon deeply invested in the story. At over 350 pages with fairly small type, this is not lightweight fiction and Chen fills the pages wonderfully, using prose in a way that deftly moves the story forward. There are many twists and turns which are unexpected; heroes and heroines both meet sad fates and underdogs rise to the top. Maneuvering this host of personalities through their culture and the ups and downs of 1700s royal life is not an easy task, but Chen handles it with aplomb. The result is a novel which I will gladly return to again.

I highly recommend this book for those who are fans of Asian culture and literature. The book is easily worth the price and merits 5 stars.

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