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Title: Wild Ginger
Author: Anchee Min
Narrator: Emily Zeller
Format: Unabridged
Length: 5 hrs and 5 mins
Language: English
Release date: 12-10-13
Publisher: Audible Studios
Ratings: 3 of 5 out of 5 votes
Genres: Fiction, Contemporary
Publisher's Summary:
At once a coming-of-age tale and a heart-rending love story, Wild Ginger explores the devastating experience of the Cultural Revolution, which defined Anchee Mins youth. The beautiful, iron-willed Wild Ginger is only in elementary school when she is singled out by the Red Guards for her "foreign-colored eyes". Her classmate Maple is also a target of persecution. The novel chronicles the two girls maturing in Shanghai in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when Chairman Mao ruled absolutely and his followers took up arms in his name. Wild Ginger grows up to become a model Maoist, but her love for a man soon places her in an untenable position and ultimately in mortal danger. This slim and powerful novel examines the "fragile sensibilities and emotions of an entire generation of Chinese youth (Washington Post) and brilliantly delineates the psychological and sexual perversion of those times.
Members Reviews:
Compared to other novels by the same author, this one disappointed
Anchee Minâs Wild Ginger relates a love story in the midst of turmoil told from the point of view of a teenage girl, Maple, who suffers at the hands of a bully, Hot Pepper, because Mapleâs father was in a forced labor camp at the beginning of Maoâs Cultural Revolution. She meets the title character, Wild Ginger, when the latter joins her school class. Because Wild Ginger has âforeignâ eyes and her father is half-French, she becomes another target for Hot Pepper, but Wild Ginger fights back and the bond between the two outcasts is forged.
Mapleâs father is missing from her life because of his political crimes; Wild Gingerâs father is dead. Maple has siblings. Wild Ginger is an only child. Their mothers are left with responsibility to hold their two families together. Together they fight the injustice, but when Wild Gingerâs mother hangs herself, she loses hope.
In spite of the hopelessness of her situation, fortunes change when she is declared a heroine for discovering a group of unscrupulous men as they tried to divide up profits from thefts from a factory. As a result, she meets Mao after the newspaper headlines proclaimed that she acted based on following the teachings of the Chairman.
The story involves love of all types: best-friends-forever love between teenage girls, love of country, love of family, and first love. It also touches on the negative reactions to love: embarrassment, jealousy, envy, anger, betrayal, revenge. The bookâs nearly storybook ending is satisfying on one level, but felt just a bit too tidy for a book aimed at an adult audience.
And that touches on what the biggest problem was for me. Because of the age of the central characters, initially I considered the book aimed at a young adult audience. The themes of bullying, friendship, and loyalty all seemed appropriate for YA readers. But as the love story that pitted Wild Ginger and Maple against one another for the love of Evergreen, the details were too graphic for a YA audience. Yet the story line, though complicated and touching on real political and psychological issues, offered too simple a path to satisfy most adults.
I have read other books by Anchee Min, more successful books based on historical characters, fleshed out using fiction techniques.