Automoderated users, Autopatrolled users, Bureaucrats, Comment administrators, Confirmed users, Moderators, Rollbackers, Administrators
215,307
edits
m (added Category:Literature of the 1990s using HotCat) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1:
{{work}}
{{Infobox book
''[[The Kitchen God's Wife]]'' is a novel by [[Amy Tan]], and, like most of her works, is a novel about Chinese-American women female identity. ▼
| title = The Kitchen God's Wife
| image =
| caption =
| author = Amy Tan
| central theme =
| elevator pitch =
| genre =
| publication date = 1991
| wiki URL =
| wiki name =
}}
▲''
The first few chapters follow Pearl Brandt, a Chinese-American in San Jose, California, as she describes her "family" - her American husband and two daughters, her mother Winnie, her overbearing Aunt Helen (who is supposedly Winnie's sister-in-law or ''something''; she and Winnie have kept each other's secrets for a ''long'' time), and the rest of Helen's family as they prepare for, first, the nth engagement party of Pearl's obnoxious cousin Bao-bao, and then the burial of her Great Aunt Du. Pearl and her family see these obligations as a chore, presumably because Pearl herself is immersed in her American identity. They go anyway, and it's revealed that Pearl has multiple sclerosis (something she has told Helen, but not her own mother). Helen tells her she has a brain tumor and that she refuses to die without Winnie knowing about Pearl's sickness.
Line 79 ⟶ 91:
{{reflist}}
[[Category:
[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Literature of the 1990s]]
|