If you had asked me 5 or 6 years ago if I liked historical fiction, my answer would have been “Meh.”
Sadly, I was effectively turned off to all things history as a child, when my first learning experiences labeled “History” were nothing more than an endless dry and boring series of names, dates, places and events to be absorbed and later regurgitated on tests. In retrospect, our teachers had to cover 7 or 8 different subjects daily, so what were chances that any of them would be a real history buff and would teach us history with great enthusiasm and insight? Apparently, pretty slim.
It wasn’t until college when I had an exceptional professor who taught Contemporary Civilization in the context of art, (I was at an art school), and for the first time someone teaching history had neurons in my brain firing rapidly. History suddenly came alive! Unfortunately, at that point, I had very little mental framework in my brain to hang it on. But I started to take an interest in the subject.
What really kicked my interest into high gear has happened in more recent years when I would come across a novel set in a particular place and time period, so rich and textured, that I wanted to learn more. One of those books was The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, and it sent me flying to the internet to learn about the Afghani people and what was transpiring in Afghanistan during the time this novel took place. I cannot recall the country of Afghanistan mentioned once in history or geography in my childhood education, but now, here was a piece of fascinating history.
The two novels that recently afforded me that desire to delve into history were those by author Lisa See, Shanghai Girls and Dreams of Joy.The first novel begins when Shanghai was known as the Paris of Asia, and sisters May and Pearl were “beautiful girls”, models. With their father having lost all their money, the sisters, with their mother, must flee Shanghai as the Japanese invade China. The sisters were forced to emigrate to the United States in arranged marriages. From their interment on Angel’s Island to creating lives for themselves and their families in Los Angeles’ Chinatown, we follow the complex relationship of Pearl and May and Pearl’s daughter, Joy.
In Dreams of Joy, Joy, now in college and angry at her family’s deception and distraught over one family member’s suicide, secretly runs away to China to find her true father. Her studies have convinced her that Communism is the best of all systems, and she is determined to start her own life, although she is soon to be profoundly discouraged and isolated. Pearl leaves the states to search for her daughter, encountering endless roadblocks along the way. The backdrop of much of the novel is the time under Chairman Mao and The Great Leap Forward, a time of alleged progress in which a famine took the lives of millions of Chinese people. (From Wikipedia – “The Great Leap ended in catastrophe, resulting in tens of millions of deaths, estimated from 18 million to 32.5 or 45 million. Historian Frank Dikotter asserts that “coercion, terror, and systematic violence were the foundation of the Great Leap Forward” and it “motivated one of the most deadly mass killings of human history”.)
Lisa See writes about family and relationships and this alone would have held my attention, but told against the backdrop of both China and the United States in times of political change and turmoil of every kind, I searched to know more. My knowledge of history is still spotty, but through the pages of beautifully written historical novels, I continue to learn. It seems history stands at my back door, always with a hand raised, always ready to knock.
Sounds interesting, Jeanne.
I liked your comment about history, as taught, seeming dry and boring. And about the right teacher making all the difference. I still remember the historical dates and events that had stories attached, but have forgotten much else!
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Thank you, Cynthia – exactly my point! 🙂 But as they always say, better late than never, so now at least I’m finding some of the fascination in history that I missed, albeit piecemeal.
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I LOVE historical fiction; thanks for the recommendations!
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My pleasure. I’m picking up another from the library today. 🙂
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The Kite Runner is a magnificent book written by a magnificent story teller. It was also the one book that I read before moving to Afghanistan which impacted me in a sad, troubling way. I saw the Shanghai Girls at the library. Will definitely pick it up now that you’ve recommended it!
Speaking of history, I am now working part-time at an international primary school and right now I’m leading a small group of fifth graders in Lit Circle. We’re studying a modern novel set in Medieval England about the Black Death. I had to do so much research and studying into the historical aspect of the book. And boy! Did I also get fired up about history in a completely new way! The things we learn long after we have left school. Thanks for your book reviews. I always love them! Have a beautiful day! Sharon
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Shanghai Girls is one of those books that makes you look at the clock during the day and wonder how soon you can get back to your novel. 🙂 I’m glad you enjoy my reviews, too – you’ll have to let me know how you enjoy Shanghai Girls.
Wow – your Lit Circle group sounds really exciting! It’s just never too late to learn, whether history or about life itself. Happy to be on the path with you.
BTW, I belong to a KidLit group, but we are adults, all working towards being published in children’s books. Enjoy your day as well. Here it is cloudy and windy, gusts up to 30 mph!
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