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Istri Dewa Dapur (The Kitchen God's Wife) - Amy Tan
Istri Dewa Dapur (The Kitchen God's Wife)
by: (author)
Format: paperback
ISBN: 9796050498
Publisher: Gramedia Pustaka Utama
Pages no: 752
Edition language: Indonesian
Bookstores:
Community Reviews
Summer Reading Project, BookLikes Satellite
Summer Reading Project, BookLikes Satellite rated it
4.0 The Kitchen God's Wife, by Amy Tan
Originally published in 1991, Amy Tan’s The Kitchen God’s Wife gives us (well, at least me) more of what we loved from The Joy Luck Club: a story in which a mother reveals a hidden life of hardship in China to her daughter. While the book opens on Winnie Louie’s daughter and the misunderstandings th...
Reading Slothfully
Reading Slothfully rated it
4.0 The Kitchen God's Wife
Well, it seems that I'm likely to have a Chinese-American son-in-law, so I figured I should begin learning something about his culture, or at least that of his parents. When my younger son lived in Japan, I read quite a lot of Japanese literature so as better to understand the culture in which he wa...
Bloodorange
Bloodorange rated it
3.0 The Kitchen God's Wife
I officially do not want to read anything by Tan again. At least this is how I feel at the moment.Why the three stars: The Kitchen God's Wife is very well written, but I hated what this book was doing to me. The WWII in China is merely a backdrop for the protagonist's personal drama of epic proporti...
Lisa (Harmony)
Lisa (Harmony) rated it
4.0 The Kitchen God's Wife
This is a story that spans decades. Begun in the present day by the first person narrative of Pearl, the bulk of the story is told by her seventy-four-year-old mother Winnie (Weili) as she relates to her daughter the tale of her first marriage, telling of what it was like in China during and after W...
Ruined by Reading
Ruined by Reading rated it
3.0 A Dark Undertaking
The Undertaking of Lily Chen is a dark, moodily atmospheric graphic novel with an odd, snatched from the headlines premise. Apparently, recently deceased women go missing in China because an old tradition dictates that unmarried men be married and buried with a female corpse to insure they have some...
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