223 reviews for:

Good Fortune

C.K. Chau

3.61 AVERAGE

_kiratune's profile picture

_kiratune's review

4.0
funny lighthearted medium-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: Yes

P&P plots can do no wrong and I gobbled this up 
guylou's profile picture

guylou's review

4.0

A fresh and witty retelling of Pride and Prejudice, 𝗚𝗢𝗢𝗗 𝗙𝗢𝗥𝗧𝗨𝗡𝗘 𝗯𝘆 𝗖.𝗞. 𝗖𝗵𝗮𝘂 brings Elizabeth Chen and Darcy Wong to life in the heart of Chinatown, exploring family, culture, and the complexities of gentrification. Elizabeth, the responsible second-oldest of five sisters, finds herself at odds with Darcy when her mother sells the beloved community center to him and his business partner, Brendan Lee. While Elizabeth sees them as wealthy outsiders threatening her neighborhood, her mother sees them as golden opportunities—especially for matchmaking. The novel shines with sharp banter, an engaging enemies-to-lovers dynamic, and an insightful look at class divides within the Chinese diaspora. The chaotic energy of Elizabeth’s family, the nosy aunties, and her constant battles with Darcy make for an entertaining read. Though the writing style takes some getting used to, the humor and wit keep things engaging. Perfect for readers who love strong heroines, cultural depth, and a fresh take on a beloved classic! 

An Elizabeth and Darcy of my own culture!

I loved this. This P&P retelling made me yearn and ache and anxious in a way that P&P should (even though I know P&P way too well to be surprised).

LB and her family live in a small apartment in New York Chinatown in the mid-2000s (I'm feeling 2006-2007). Her degree in communications still hasn't gotten her a job so she still works odd jobs and helps at the fried chicken restaurant her family manages. She is committed to her neighborhood, especially the rundown community center, and she considers it an affront when her mother brokers a deal for some rich investors to buy and fix up the center. Darcy represents everything she hates about rich people, so of course she must fight him to make sure the center remains safe from gentrification.

As a mixed race Chinese American, I loved that early in the book, LB was described as feeling a loss from not being fully Chinese nor fully anglo because she spoke poor Chinese. I feel so seen when a character doesn't feel like they fit in.

I also laughed SO hard at Mr. Collins being the kind of white guy who brags to the Asians about how wonderful he is for having bothered to learn Chinese, unlike other people. His cluelessness and condescension was *chefs kiss.*

I borrowed the audiobook on Libby but will need to buy my own copy so I can reread. This was an excellent retelling!

And now to fancast a Good Fortune adaptation because I am DYING to see this as a film.

heatherjchin's review

4.25
adventurous emotional funny lighthearted reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

haynull's review

3.25
funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

jassmine's review

5.0

"Elizabeth held out the last of the smoldering joint. "No," she said. "Thank you."
Darcy took it from her with a light shrug of gratitude.
She stared at him in amazement as he lifted to his lips and took a drag. "You smoke?"
Brendan snickered, shoving his hands in his pockets. "No," he said, flashing him a quick glance. "He doesn't."
Darcy pressed his lips into a thin line. "It's dead, anyway."

This book gave me all the feels... I really don't know what it is about smoking as a romance trope that's doing it for me - since I don't care much for smoking in real life and I think the "drinking from the same bottle" variant is kind of cringe - but... ugh, the scene above made me kick my feet!

Anyway, maybe I should start from the beginning because Good Fortune isn't on many of my friends radars but it absolutely should be! This book is a contemporary US-Chinese [b:Pride and Prejudice|1885|Pride and Prejudice|Jane Austen|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1320399351l/1885._SY75_.jpg|3060926] retelling which... honestly, after reading this, I'm kind of convinced that all contemporary P&P retellings should be South-East Asian, because this just fit so well! I loved Ayesha at Last, but I think I loved this book even better. It just softens some of the harsh edges of the Bennet family, leaving some of their relationships tense, but also more loving (I was a bit concerned about this after reading [b:The Other Bennet Sister|45186556|The Other Bennet Sister|Janice Hadlow|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1582124111l/45186556._SY75_.jpg|69908883] earlier this year). It's a bit hard for me to describe... but I just really loved the vibe of the book.

I also really loved Darcy's character. We only see him through Elizabeth's eyes and for most of the book she isn't really charitable towards him and despite that I related to a lot of his behaviour and read it completely differently from her. I am wondering how much of it was authorial intention and how much just my baseless wishing. However, I believe I'm not the first one to read Darcy as neurodivergent and I think the writing in this book is really helping that assumption. Like the scene where Darcy looks kind of lost into the menu and Elizabeth thinks he's just too snobbish to find anything on the menu that would appeal to him. While my brain went immediately to "no, he just never ate here before, didn't look up the menu in advance and they don't have his usual choices, so he's clearly having a decision freeze". I mean, I could totally be wrong, but there were several moments like this one and I was just relating to him super hard from the beginning.

P&P is also kind of the ultimate "he falls first" trope and I do love that, it's one of my favourite. And for that reason I found Darcy's side of the romance very satisfying - the joint scene is just perfection! I am a sucker for a good pining and omg did I feel him pine even though our POV Elizabeth was completely oblivious. If I had to complain, I would say that Elizabeth's side of the romance was a little less satisfactory. I feel like this is a common issue with P&P retellings and it was okay in this one, but I was just so into the romance here that I really wanted it to have a little more powerful ending and it just.... stayed kind of flat? Which, flat on a pretty great level, but I wanted a bit of a crescendo, you know?

Unlike [b:Ayesha at Last|43124133|Ayesha at Last|Uzma Jalaluddin|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1544037862l/43124133._SX50_.jpg|57683370] Good Fortune pretty much goes beat by beat with P&P which made it a bit predictable, but it also switches things around enough so that you can never be sure what exactly will happen. For example, Mrs. Bennet/Chen is still interested to see her daughters well married but she's even more obsessed with them getting jobs that would give them enough status in the community. Jane is "the best" of the sisters because she's in medical school not because she's the prettiest. This changes the main theme of the book pretty successfully - there is not a single marriage proposal in sight! And I just loved how that shook things around, still you can generally guess what kind of beat would come next and toward the ending I was ready for it to loosen up a little bit. Although that might be also a consequence of me reading too many P&P retellings this year... ([b:Most Ardently|111673641|Most Ardently|Gabe Cole Novoa|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1684570364l/111673641._SY75_.jpg|95479237], [b:The Clergyman's Wife|44286204|The Clergyman's Wife A Pride & Prejudice Novel|Molly Greeley|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1569893224l/44286204._SY75_.jpg|67107724], [b:The Other Bennet Sister|45186556|The Other Bennet Sister|Janice Hadlow|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1582124111l/45186556._SY75_.jpg|69908883]...)

Good Fortune also talks about photography a lot and at the beginning I wasn't quite sure about it (especially since I had hard time imagining Elizabeth Bennet as a photographer geek), but as the story progressed the book used it really cleverly as a narrative instrument and I was won over.

The one thing that I feel could be deal-breaker about this book for some of my bookish friends is the fact that Darcy is filthy rich, which honestly I'm not the biggest fan of either. The book has a big theme of community versus profit and I was really curious how the author will solve the dilemma to make everyone a good person, but she... sort of doesn't really? I mean it kind of turns out that
Spoilercommunity was always important for Darcy and apparently he had been heading mentoring programs and other community based projects for years, but for some reason he baited Elizabeth into thinking that he only cared about profit for some reason? It's kind of unclear what had been his intentions with their local community center in the beginning... like did he changed his mind around it or... what was he doing?!
Generally, there were a couple of moments that I found a bit unclear, the one that I mentioned earlier and then also there is this scene pretty in the beginning where
SpoilerElizabeth and Charlotte are clearing windows and Darcy is like "you should use ladder since you are so small" and Elizabeth goes in her head "well, that's just terrible idea, we done this bazillion of times and I know that's stupid but I'm going to use the ladder just to show him how stupid that is" which is pretty on brand for Elizabeth and then it does in fact go terribly and she and Jane get hurt but for some reason she never goes "See, Darcy, this was terrible idea!" but instead she kind of takes the blame for it? I mean, if she did it knowing it was stupid it is her fault too, but that just undermines her logic in the beginning?! Like, am I going crazy?! Be a little unreasonable, Elizabeth, please!



So, yeah, there are some downsides and some places were just a little bit unclear which made me think that just a tiny bit more of editing could have make this book an utter perfection, alas...
I really loved this, I loved the characters, I loved the chemistry, I really enjoyed the Chinese culture bits. The audio narration is also spectacular, I loved that quite a bit, even though the narrator is not doing anything that special, but sometimes that's way better than a narrator trying way too hard. Catherine Ho has a really pleasant voice and I enjoyed her take on the characters. I would absolutely recommend this to anyone who likes a good P&P retelling, C.K. Chau has a great understanding of the original and I loved reading her spin of things. But this novel is absolutely capable of standing on it's own as a great contemporary romance that is really funny and focuses on family quite a bit. Really wish this book will find its readers because I don't understand how it can have so little reads on GR!
4,5⭐ rounded up from me!

an3ks's review

5.0

Absolutely beautiful. Choice of language perfectly mirrors Pride and Prejudice while weaving in color and humor. The author’s pacing is impeccable and no moment is boring.

sew_emma's review

4.0

A very enjoyable modern retelling of P&P

nbc30's review

4.0
lighthearted medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I love a Pride & Prejudice retelling and this novel set in NYC’s Chinatown hits all the beats from Jane Austen’s classic. A few moments feel a bit forced, but it was an enjoyable read overall. 
jpez's profile picture

jpez's review

3.75
emotional funny hopeful lighthearted medium-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

One of the truer Pride & Prejudice adaptations I’ve read.