“This is an intricately orchestrated cross-generational memoir, and one that is particularly successful in linking the world of China in the first half of the twentieth century to the opportunities and ambiguities of those Chinese who grew up as Americans. It is a subtle book that resonates in the mind as well as being a true family history that spans moods and generations.” —Jonathan Spence, author of The Search for Modern China and Sterling Professor of History, Yale University
“Absolutely mesmerizing. It captures not only the soul of a family, but the essence of twentieth-century China.” —Iris Chang, author of The Rape of Nanking
“A beautiful piece of memory and history. The Girl from Purple Mountain presents the intimacies and secrets of the Chai family set against the broad canvas that is China in the twentieth century. This is an amazing story of survival and endurance, fierce love and bitter resentments, and the failures and triumphs of the human heart.” —Lisa See, author of On Gold Mountain
“The Girl from Purple Mountain is a wonderful resource for teachers of modern China, appropriate for introductory courses in East Asian Civilizations or East Asian Religions, and advanced courses and seminars on Confucianism or the history of modern China. The story of an unusual and resourceful woman and her family coping in China in the 1930s, Girl from Purple Mountain provides both context and challenges to abstract ideas about Chinese culture in general and Confucianism in particular. I have used The Girl from Purple Mountain for an introductory undergraduate course 'Chinese and Japanese Religious Traditions' and for an upper level seminar entitled 'Confucianism and Its Critics.' My students were absorbed by the stories of Ruth and her family; they quickly saw the breakdown in the traditional, Confucian ideals of family. My students also developed a new sympathy for the difficulties of a time and place that can seem remote and disconnected from their own experience; I will use Girl from Purple Mountain for future sections of our introductory 'East Asian Civilizations' class.” —Jennifer Oldstone-Moore, Wittenberg University
“The fascinating story of a Chinese family, covering three generations and the entire 20th Century . . . To read this work is to understand the drama of China--and its people--in revolutionary times.” —Robert A. Scalapino, Robson Research Professor of Government Emeritus, Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley
“This stirring memoir . . . is graced with masterful writing and keen observations. The authors deftly move in and out of colorful anecdotes by means of flashbacks while never stalling the forward motion of their narrative. In telling a moving story of Chinese immigrants who suffer the hardships of war and political strife, the authors also give a succinct account on modern Chinese history. The Girl from Purple Mountain should be on the must-read list of anyone interested in Chinese culture and history.” —Tao-Tai Hsia, Chief of the Eastern Law Division, Library of Congress
“More than a good story . . . it reveals the conflict between a daughter's desire to know her heritage and her father's desire not to be reminded how much distance the passage of time and the vicissitudes of history have placed between him and his origins.” —The Washington Post Book World
“The Girl from Purple Mountain was one of the most popular texts in my American Women's Auto/Biography course. The students found Ruth Tsao Chai's story, and the father-daughter dynamic of the Chai's dual-narration, to be fascinating. The photographs at the beginning of each chapter also provided another opportunity for textual analysis and discussion in the course. I recommend it, enthusiastically.” —Dr. Lori Askeland, English Department, Wittenberg University
“A multilayered memoir that successfully weaves historical detail with familial emotions of different generations.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Adept and bold-spirited, savvy in its perspective on history, unflinching in its revelation. The authors' compelling rendering of our human proclivity for both tenderness and cruelty distinguishes them as ardent laborers in the fields of the word. This is a work which smolders and sings.” —Marilyn Krysl, author of Warscape With Lovers
“A poignant and delightful memoir.” —Henry Luce III, former publisher of Time magazine
“This remarkable and beautifully written memoir is indeed a love story, on many levels, set against the backdrop of modern China's turbulent history. The mix of generations and cultures, told engagingly by two separate narrators, makes The Girl from Purple Mountain a unique and fascinating read.” —Howard Goldblatt, translator of Red Sorghum and The Republic of Wine
“The Girl from Purple Mountain is an eloquent and searching story of mystery and revelation, a rich deep, multilayered saga destined to be compared with Wild Swans and other masterpieces of familial exploration. Filled with finely wrought historical detail, the book is both a powerful personal narrative and an illuminating look at China, complete with irony and grace.” —Karin Evans, author of The Lost Daughters of China: Abandoned Girls, Their Journey to America, and the Search for a Missing Past
“This 20th-century odyssey of an elite Chinese Christian family from Nanjing focuses on Tsao Mei-en, mother and grandmother, respectively, to the father and daughter coauthors of this remarkable narrative. The authors' individual voices weave throughout this compelling story of one of China's first female college graduates. A woman of indomitable will and passionate conviction, Tsao Mei-en dominated her husband, a professor of law, and her three sons, including the eldest, Winberg. Her strength of character, resourcefulness, and intelligence held the family together through turbulent decades of civil and foreign wars, revolution, and upheaval. Tragic, funny, lyrical, and respectful, this intimate and unforgettable family chronicle is also a history of modern China. In the Chinese tradition, it is a filial act of reverence by a father and daughter who cherish their roots and understand how the past shapes our lives.” —Steven I. Levine, University of Montana, Missoula, Library Journal