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Shanghai Girls
Shanghai Girls
Author: Lisa See
In 1937, Shanghai is the Paris of Asia, a city of great wealth and glamour, the home of millionaires and beggars, gangsters and gamblers, patriots and revolutionaries, artists and warlords. Thanks to the financial security and material comforts provided by their father's prosperous rickshaw business, twenty-one-year-old Pearl Chin and her younge...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9781400067114
ISBN-10: 1400067111
Publication Date: 5/26/2009
Pages: 336
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 208

3.9 stars, based on 208 ratings
Publisher: Random House
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

cathyskye avatar reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 2260 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 8
First Line: "Our daughter looks like a South China peasant with those red cheeks," my father complains, pointedly ignoring the soup before him.

Lisa See is a master of immersing her readers in a time and a culture completely different from their own. Snow Flower and the Secret Fan was one of my top reads the year that I read it, and I couldn't wait to begin reading See's latest.

The 1930s are drawing to a close. Two sisters, Pearl and May, enjoy their lifestyle. They are "calendar girls"--what we would call models. Their faces sell dozens of different products. They wear the latest Western fashions. They party late. They like to ignore their rich parents. If a ceiling fan disappears or a few servants seem to have gone missing, Pearl and Mae pay little attention. They are young, beautiful, and they live in Shanghai--the Paris of Asia.

Their world falls to pieces when they learn that their father has gambled away his wealth and sold them as brides to two Chinese brothers living in California in order to clear his debts. They throw away their tickets to Los Angeles and go on modeling and going to parties, learning too late that their behavior cost them their chance to flee the invading Japanese. Going through hell to escape Shanghai, they make their way to California only to be kept at Angel Island--the Ellis Island of the West Coast of the United States. The next twenty years will bring many changes to their lives.

In so many ways, this book succeeds brilliantly. The author took my imagination straight to the streets of Shanghai and into the lives of two very young and selfish girls who can step over the body of a dead baby in the street on their way to a party, neither of them seeing anything wrong. This is one of the things I love about See's writing: the way she matter-of-factly opens my eyes to a totally alien culture.

The Japanese invasion of Shanghai was vivid, as was the two sisters' escape from the city. The endless months they were forced to spend on Angel Island made me a bit stir crazy, and Pearl's life in Los Angeles was depressing to the extreme.

Where the book failed for me was in the characterizations. I don't care for books in which all the male characters are depicted as lazy, stupid, weak, ego maniacal or just plain evil. Pearl's husband Sam was the sole decent male in the entire lot, and even he had his moments of weakness.

I also have to admit that I found the two main characters, May and Pearl, to be extremely irritating. May is the one who thinks only of herself. As long as she's being complimented and has plenty of pretty clothes to wear and fancy transportation, she's fit to live with. If those things don't happen, she's a pain in the neck. Pearl, on the other hand, is the classic martyr-- always sublimating herself in order to kowtow to what everyone else wants--and being oh so brave about it the entire time.

The ending of the book was rather abrupt. Almost a classic cliffhanger involving Pearl's spoiled daughter. It will be interesting to see if this does set up a sequel.

You may wonder why I still gave this book such a good rating. Such is the power of Lisa See's writing. Her depiction of Shanghai and Los Angeles during that time period and her description of culture in both Shanghai and the Chinatown of Los Angeles are so powerful that I can forget about wanting to shake some sense into both May and Pearl.

I am a character-driven reader. It is very seldom that I'm able to rate a book highly when I don't care for any of the people in it. In the case of Shanghai Girls, I think of the streets of Shanghai, the sights, the smells, bombs exploding, working in the shops of Chinatown in Los Angeles...the vivid canvas See painted is what I think of, not Pearl and May.
reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 51 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
I thought this was a very good book, though perhaps not as much as Snow Flower and the Secret Fan. It moves quickly, though, the characters are well drawn, and the plot is interwoven well with swift twists and turns. I'd recommend it, since it also gives a window into Chinese culture and perspective of the 1930's into the fifties.
bethany9529 avatar reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Although I was excited to read this book, I was very let down. The premise of the story was interesting, and I have read other books about historical China and really enjoyed them. I did not care for this book. I really did not find myself caring what happened to the main characters, and I was VERY disappointed by the ending - much to abrupt even if it is setting up for a sequel. All in all, if you want to read a good book by this author I would recommend Snow Flower and the Secret Fan.
merina avatar reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 31 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
It was not nearly as good to me as Peony In Love or Snow Flower and the Secret Fan. I was interested in the story, but it seemed rushed at the beginning, and then rushed at the end as well.
starvinArtist avatar reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 58 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
First of Sees books I have read. Interesting Story, kept me involved but I hated the way it ended. Makes me wonder if there is a book 2 continuation due to come out in the future. My rating would be between "do not like" and "like". We need a "fair" rating.
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reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 48 more book reviews
This is about the bonds of sisterhood and the psychological journey of becoming American.

This historical fiction is during 1937 when Japan bombed Shanghai.

These two Chinese sisters are married off by their father. They have to move to America where their husbands live.

And so the Chinese immigrants experience is seen in a moving story
reviewed Shanghai Girls on
I have a soft spot for Asian stories set in the early 1900's. This one did not disappoint with intense emotions and situations. I could easily picture all of the characters and cried several times throughout the book. Lovely story.
iggam2008 avatar reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 10 more book reviews
This wasn't my favorite book from Lisa See, but it was still good. I thought it was interesting how she described the hardships these girls saw in the beginning vs how she described things in the end. It did a very good job of showing how the attitude shifted and how they grew up.
reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 267 more book reviews
In recent memory, there aren't many books in which I truly dislike the main characters. I finished it only because Lisa See is a good writer, and I needed the background for the sequel which I will read next. These girls sounded more like spoiled brats from a more modern era. In fact, they have no empathy for any of their fellow countrymen living in abject poverty, nor are they aware of others' difficulties. Since they themselves were rich, they were immune from any reality. It isn't until they are thrown into brutal war that they feel anything for anyone. Even then, as they assimilate into America, I could not appreciate their attitudes. It took more than two hundred pages before I felt any sympathy for them. I hope the sequel will be better. D.
ourbookaddiction avatar reviewed Shanghai Girls on
Loved this book! One of the few I didn't rush through because I wanted to linger over all the rich history.
reviewed Shanghai Girls on + 92 more book reviews
Wonderful tale of the Chinese immigrant experience and the early Los Angeles China Town. So many things reminded me of my own childhood in Los Angeles county, the incinerators near the clothes line, the clothing and hair styles. Everything painted a wonderful picture for me.
reviewed Shanghai Girls on
Really loved this book!

Book Wiki

People/Characters
Pearl Chin (Primary Character)
May (Major Character)

Genres: