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Dear Chrysanthemums: A Novel in Stories

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Dear Chrysanthemums: A Novel in Stories

Contributors:

By (Author) Fiona Sze-Lorrain

ISBN:

9781668012987

Publisher:

Simon & Schuster

Imprint:

Scribner

Publication Date:

21st June 2023

UK Publication Date:

8th June 2023

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Other Subjects:

Historical fiction

Dewey:

813.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

176

Dimensions:

Width 140mm, Height 213mm, Spine 18mm

Weight:

188g

Description

A startling and vivid debut novel in stories from acclaimed poet and translator Fiona Sze-Lorrain, featuring deeply compelling Asian women who reckon with the past, violence, and exileset in Shanghai, Beijing, Singapore, Paris, and New York.

Composed of several interconnected stories, each taking place in a year ending with the number six, ironically a number that in Chinese divination signifies a smooth life, Dear Chrysanthemums is a novel about the scourge of inhumanity, survival, and past trauma that never leaves. The women in these stories are cooks, musicians, dancers, protestors, mothers and daughters, friends and enemies, all inexplicably connected in one way or another.

Cooking for Madam Chiang, 1946: Two cooks work for Madame Chiang Kai-shek and prepare a foreign dish craved by their mistress, which becomes a political weapon and leads to their tragic end.

Death at the Wukang Mansion, 1966: Punished for her extramarital affair, a dancer is transferred to Shanghai during the Cultural Revolution and assigned to an ominous apartment in a building whose other residents often depart in coffins.

The White Piano, 1966: A bidding pianist from New York City settles down in Paris and is assaulted when a mysterious piano arrives from Singapore.

The Invisible Window, 2016: After their exile following the Tiananmen Square massacre, three women gather in a French cathedral to renew their friendship and reunite in their grief and faith.

With devastating precision, a masterly ear for language, and a profound understanding of both human cruelty and compassion, Fiona Sze-Lorrain weaves Dear Chrysanthemums, an evocative and disturbing portrait of diasporic life, the shared story of uprooting, resilience, artistic expression, and enduring love.

Reviews

Praise for Dear Chrysanthemums

With shattering clarity, Sze-Lorrain teases apart the layers of complicity and survival that create a web of secrets, casting doubt on ever knowing the full truth behind each persons story.Booklist

Graceful Sze-Lorrain effortlessly evokes the spirit of each setting, be it the ardent fervor of nationalism during the Chinese Civil War or the seedy glamor of a dive bar in Paris, and she imbues her characters with haunting melancholy as victims doomed to the mishaps of verity and the equally hurtful edges of fiction. This author is one to watch.Publishers Weekly

"Sze-Lorrain excels in the lyrical mode as her attention to sensory observation illustrates how seemingly minor details such as the play of light from a shattered stained-glass window or the geometrically interlocking joints in a table can become microcosmic worlds if one knows how to look. Weaving these details together with an orchestral sensibility, the novel serves as a multilayered meditation on intergenerational trauma, memory, and resilience...By turns delicate and wild, this novel will linger like a chrysanthemums fragrance long after the last page."Kirkus

InDear Chrysanthemums, Fiona Sze-Lorrain collects the shards of modern Chinese history and builds a prismatic, gorgeously intimate story of women who face impossible choices and losses in order to survive. Unflinching and haunting, the novel is a vivid portrayal of disillusionment and exile. Step by step, Sze-Lorrain constructs an intricate and deeply moving web that will leave you stunned by the end. Tsering Yangzom Lama, author ofWe Measure the Earth with Our Bodies, shortlisted for the 2022 Giller Prize

How can a book be simultaneously so beautiful and so heartbreakingDear Chrysanthemumsexplores the repercussions of the major events of modern Chinese historythe Chinese civil war, the Cultural Revolution, the Tiananmen Square massacreas they echo throughout lives in the diaspora. Sze-Lorrains storytelling is graceful yet fiercethis is an important novel about histories that have changed the world.
Shawna Yang Ryan, author ofGreen IslandandWater Ghosts

"Dear Chrysanthemumsweaves together the stories of Asian women whose lives are shaped, with and without their knowledge, by the storm of history and cultural upheaval. The political is always personal in this remarkable debut, in which the practice of artdance, music, writing, even the art of cookingis opposed to oppression, violence, loneliness, displacement, and death. With uncompromising detail, in language that is at once precise and evocative, author Sze-Lorrain takes us inside the individual struggles of her characters to reveal fascinating patterns of connection and hidden truth."
Mary Helen Stefaniak, author ofThe World of PondsideandThe Cailiffs of Baghdad, Georgia

"I read this book with my heart in my throat. Taken one by one, each of these delectable stories offers an intimate, sensuous portrait of the life of otherwise mysterious girls and women, their desires and obsessions and griefs. Taken as a whole, the novel is a heady, energetic, global mosaic that conveys just how deeply one human soul can relate to another."
Susanna Daniel, author ofSea CreaturesandStiltsville

"Just beneath the precisely-rendered quotidian world of these linked narratives lies a fathomless well of menace. Giventhis, Sze-Lorrain seems to ask, what are lifes chances"
Frederick Turner, author ofThe Go-Between: A Novel of the Kennedy Yearsand1929: A Novel of the Jazz Age

"ExquisiteDear Chrysanthemumsachieves the aesthetic ambitions of a novel with lyrical prose and imagery. Sze-Lorrain probes into our complex, volatile society, expressing her thought and lucidity."
Ma Jian, author ofChina Dream,The Dark Road, andBeijing Coma

Author Bio

Fiona Sze-Lorrainis a fiction writer, poet, musician, translator, and editor. She writes and translates in English, French, and Chinese. She is the author of five poetry collections, most recentlyRain in Plural(Princeton, 2020)andThe Ruined Elegance(Princeton, 2016),and fifteen books of translation. A finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and the Best Translated Book Award among other honors,she was a 201920 Abigail R. Cohen Fellow at the Columbia Institute for Ideas and Imagination and the inaugural writer-in-residence at the Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires. She lives in Paris and has performed worldwide as a zheng harpist.

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