71 reviews for:

The Jade Peony

Wayson Choy

3.66 AVERAGE

xenia_a's review

2.0

Meh… had to read this book for school. There was no plot or storyline, and the ending in my opinion was awful. I liked the characters, but not how each section ended so abruptly. There was so much to work with, especially with Jung’s story that I feel wasn’t even touched on because his section was so short. I think Jung and Liang’s sections were my favourite, Liang probably because we’re both oldest daughters. Sek-Lung’s section was probably my least favourite, maybe because it wasn’t as necessarily interesting as the others, or maybe because I just really couldn’t get into it. I wouldn’t really say it’s a good book, but not the worst I’ve ever read.

arieanna's review

2.0

I expected this to be an amazing book. I didn't enjoy it.

janmel77's review

2.0

I found it hard to really get into this book. It seemed like 3 different books, and none of them really fit together. Some parts were ok, and I only finished this book because I was really hoping that it would get better towards the end. Not a book I would read again, though some parts were interesting, i never felt like I really got to know any of the characters.

m3 english trauma.
vickycbooks's profile picture

vickycbooks's review

emotional reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

 The intense sense of place and atmosphere that THE JADE PEONY evokes is one of the highlights of Choy's writing. It firmly grounds the reader in 1930s and 40s Vancouver and provides a vignette-like look at three different children in a Chinese immigrant family.

In many ways, the short novel looks at one specific experience (Chinese immigrants to Vancouver at this time period), but in other ways, it contains a wide breadth of thought and feeling from its characters. Each of the main characters, Jook-Liang, Jung-Sum, and Sek-Lung all take on different roles in the family which significantly shape their varied experience.

I think Jook-Liang's story was my favorite -- hers was in many ways the lightest of the three. It predominantly looks at a formative time period when she was young, idolizing Shirley Temple and forming a close and heartwarming bond with an elderly man in the community that their family knows. Jook-Liang struggles with her position in the family (she is less cared for in some ways because she is a daughter, as well as being birthed by her father's second wife, whom she must call "Stepmother") and basks in the elderly man's kind attentions on her.

Jung-Sum's story is a story of boyhood and queer awakening, looking in a non-chronological nature at how he enters the family (he is adopted into the family) and his position as a second son. We see him develop an interest in boxing, and this takes Jung-Sum's story in places which lead him to understand new things about himself.

Sek-Lung's story is in many ways the darkest -- it is firmly grounded during World War II and we see a lot of tension between Sek-Lung and others, especially as he sensationalizes the war and experiences increased aggression towards Japanese people in particular. His story is as much a coming of age as it is a coming of empathy, as his experiences with his new babysitter leads to conflicting feelings and new perspectives for Sek-Lung.

Overall, I thought THE JADE PEONY was a very moving work and I can see why it is a classic piece of Canadian fiction. (My copy was used and clearly annotated by a student in school -- I had the pleasure of reading two different definitions of concubine by their hand lol). I'm interested in reading the next book, especially as the first son's experience is only highlighted through other characters' perspectives.

Content Warnings:
use of racial slurs, not just for various Asian ethnicities, but for Black, Native, and other ethnicities; internalized & external racism; war; homophobia; death of a loved one; gender discrimination within a household; corporal punishment; mentions of domestic violence; a self-enacted abortion
 
vanessa_s's profile picture

vanessa_s's review

4.0
medium-paced
reflective sad slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

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arufo29's review

4.25
emotional funny reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
adelledauz's profile picture

adelledauz's review

4.0
adventurous emotional inspiring reflective tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

2.5 stars :/

I was really excited about this book. It was covering a topic i never read in fiction and I’m always interested in reading canadian stories. But this novel felt unremarkable. I liked the first section with the only daughter and her relationship with the old man.... but even that one got repetitive, and kinda dragged on. Ugh, I’m really disappointed, I wanted to like it more