Available for pre-order:
https://www.norton.com/books/daughters-of-the-flower-fragrant-garden
Sisters separated by war forge new identities as they are forced to choose between family, nation, and their own independence.
Scions of a once-great southern Chinese family that produced the tutor of the last emperor, Jun and Hong were each other’s best friends until, in their twenties, they were separated by chance at the end of the Chinese Civil War. For the next thirty years, while one became a model Communist, the other a model capitalist, they could not even communicate.
PRAISE
Daughters of the Flower Fragrant Garden: Sisters Separated by China's Civil War
“Beginning in war-torn China, Daughters of the Flower Fragrant Garden tells a compelling story about diaspora, root-seeking, and the triumph of familial love and human perseverance.”
“At last, a profoundly human story that illuminates the staggering personal consequences of China and Taiwan’s historic split—from both sides. Rare is the author who can portray war and its aftermath so evenhandedly. This powerful page-turner of a family torn apart—and surviving—is as unforgettable as it is important.”
REVIEWS
A saga of the author’s two Chinese aunts that mirrors the convulsive history of 20th-century China...
Beautifully woven family memories coalesce into a vivid history of two very different Chinas.
— KIRKUS REVIEW
…This historical biography adds to the oeuvre of similar works (Big Sister, Little Sister, Red Sister and Wild Swans, both by Jung Chang) but is no less intriguing, as it’s only since recently that these stories can be told with the dignity and honesty they deserve. Cinematic in scope, each sister goes through parallel epic sagas that are sure to entrance the reader. VERDICT: A wonderful addition to any library that will appeal to a wide audience interested in historical narrative, Chinese, history, family dynamics, and generally as a story of struggle against the odds. – Kelly Karst, LIBRARY JOURNAL
Li...mixes family memoir and geopolitical history in this compassionate portrait of her two aunts... Laced with frank reflections on the author's own experience as a Chinese immigrant to the U.S., this is a poignant and intimate chronicle of the Chinese diaspora. -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Li Zhuqing is a professor at Brown University and a faculty curator at the University’s Rockefeller Library. She is the author of four books in her academic discipline, but Daughters of the Flower Fragrant Garden, a longtime personal project, represents her first foray into family history and memoir. The book follows the extraordinary lives of her two maternal aunts, women whose experiences traced China’s journey through war and upheaval across three quarters of the last century.
Zhuqing was born in Fuzhou, the capital city of Fujian province on China’s Southeast coast. The daughter of university professors, she spent many of her childhood years shuttled from one relative to another given that her parents had been exiled to the countryside during the Cultural Revolution. Indeed, for part of that period, Zhuqing herself was sent to the countryside to be with her parents. By the time they were able to return to the city to resume their teaching, she was already in middle school. Then, at age 16, Zhuqing attended Zhongshan University, a 36-hour train ride from home.
This disjointed life continued once Zhuqing graduated from university and was assigned by the state to teach English at a local college. Though she hoped to continue on to graduate school in China, her employer forbade it and refused to provide permission.
It was at that point that Aunt Jun, a relative from Taiwan who she never even knew existed, returned to China for a visit, and ultimately provided her a path to attend graduate school in the United States. Zhuqing would ultimately go on to earn a PhD in Asian Languages and Literature from the University of Washington.
Academic studies are systematic and logical, yet for Zhuqing, they cannot explain life’s randomness and disjointedness. It is that intermixing of fate and human agency that is so central to the story of Zhuqing’s aunts presented in Daughters of the Flower Fragrant Garden.
Articles
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/04/war-family-separation-taiwan-ukraine/629432/?utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
"...long after the guns are silenced, even if the best efforts at reconciliation are undertaken, separation doesn’t end when the war does."
South China Morning Post Magazine
Amid China's Civil War Between Communists and Nationalists, How Two Sisters Were Separated by Fate and Kept Apart Through Their Successes
https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-magazine/books/article/3181230/amid-chinas-civil-war-between-communists-and?utm_source=copy_link&utm_medium=share_widget&utm_campaign=3181230
Worl Journal 世界日報週刊 親子 :教育至上的四代母親
https://www.worldjournal.com/wj/story/122840/6328085?from=wj_catelistnews
Events
June 9, 2022
June All About Books NEIBA, Sturbridge, MA
June 21, 2022
Books on the Square, Providence, RI
July 10, 2022
North America Writers' Association, Washington D.C.
Contact Me
For all media inquiries, bookings, and interviews please contact: kradler@wwnorton.com
Contact the author directly or give your thoughts about the book, find me at @ZhuqingLi1 on Twitter.
Zhuqing Li © 2022