Shanghai Girls

Shanghai Girls

2009 • 337 pages

Ratings23

Average rating4.1

15

I didn't get as much enjoyment from this book as I have other books by Lisa See. [b:The Island of Sea Women 40538657 The Island of Sea Women Lisa See https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1549839392l/40538657.SY75.jpg 62803411] was my first from her, and I liked it so much I also read [b:Snow Flower and the Secret Fan 40873273 Snow Flower and the Secret Fan Lisa See https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1532005164l/40873273.SY75.jpg 1453585], which I also enjoyed, if a bit frustrating. I wish I could say the same about this book, but it was all of the frustration for not a lot of gain. Sisters Pearl and May are displaced Beautiful Girls from Shanghai, basically pin-up girls used in advertising campaigns. They believe themselves untouchable and unapproachable, but soon find real life politics and war intruding on their sheltered and pampered lives. In order to save themselves, they find their way to American and Angel Island, chasing after arranged marriages that they were reluctant to pursue before it became their only way out.I found Pearl and May unlikeable in different ways. Pearl is rooted in tradition and sensible actions, while May is the dreamer and used to getting her way. On several occasions in the book, Pearl has to save May from her own careless actions, who then flippantly doesn't see anything she's done as being wrong. Pearl herself turns bitter and suspicious of everyone and everything as she ages, and the fact that the two sisters never air their grievances against one another at all during their lives together comes to a (predictable) head near the end of the story. Lisa See loves driving home the importance of communication in her books, and this one is no exception. I also never really felt connected with any of the characters. Things happened, but without that connection I also didn't really feel anything when they did. I just felt a vague sense of importance, like “hey this is relevant to the story” rather than any real grief or sympathy for the main characters. I don't know, this one felt like a miss to me. If you've never read Lisa See before, read one of the other books by her I've mentioned here, because I think they do a better job at telling a story you feel connected with.

May 4, 2021