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Book Reviews of The Garden of Evening Mists

The Garden of Evening Mists
The Garden of Evening Mists
Author: Tan Twan Eng
ISBN-13: 9781905802623
ISBN-10: 1905802625
Publication Date: 11/1/2011
Pages: 448
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Myrmidon Books Ltd
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

BigGreenChair avatar reviewed The Garden of Evening Mists on + 453 more book reviews
Beautiful! I've read two books by this author now and absolutely LOVE his writing style.
reviewed The Garden of Evening Mists on + 27 more book reviews
Loved this book. Not only is it beautifully-written, but it tells a great story about a part of the world that I did not know much about. With his first two books, Tan Twan Eng has been long and short-listed for the Mann Booker Prize. He was awarded the Mann Asian Prize for this book.
maura853 avatar reviewed The Garden of Evening Mists on + 542 more book reviews
I didn't love this novel, but I stuck with it because I felt it offered some valuable insights in a place and a period of history that I knew little about.

I felt that it was trying to do a bit too much, but perhaps that's an "occupational hazard" for a novel about Malaysia -- a place where the local population, and local history, have been overlaid with layers and layers of colonists, invaders and in-comers, every layer offering the possibility of fabulous diversity, and shocking violence. The central and secondary characters must, for the purposes of the novel, be either witnesses or representatives of as many of those layers as possible, as they play out in the mid-20th century: Yun Ling is a Malaysian of Chinese ethnicity, who grows up in a relatively privileged bubble, suffers terribly during the Japanese invasion, recovers from her traumas after the War to become a Judge, contributing to the rebuilding of Malaysian society, which then puts her directly at odds with the Insurgency which attempted to challenge the Malaysia that had been constructed by privileged colonists and in-comers.

So far, so good -- Yun Ling has to be a bit of a "Zelig," she must experience and witness all this to be our eyes and ears on this journey. Where I did begin to baulk was at the major plot thread in which she decides to commemorate her sister, murdered by the Japanese in an internment camp, by constructing a formal Japanese garden, and to this end becomes involved with a mysterious exile, rumored to be the former Head Gardener to the Emperor of Japan, driven away by some disgrace. This felt a bit forced -- nice to think that a woman would commemorate her beloved sister with a cultural icon of the country that killed her. Nice to think that, eventually, she could overcome her rage and grief to have a warm, intimate relationship with a man who might be an agent of that country. Would it ever really happen?

So, well worth reading, but I felt that it did test my patience a bit.

I also had one stylistic quibble: Eng seemed to think that he could build in a sense of the diversity and foreignness of his characters by embedding one foreign word in each sentence they spoke. I don't think I would have minded so much if the word had been something untranslatable, or something so unique to the culture (a food dish, an animal, an item of clothing or jewellery, whatever) that only that word would do. But no -- often as not, the word was bland and ordinary, and it just felt like a rather patronising way of reminding us that this person wasn't a native English speaker. End of rant.