Showing posts with label Chinatown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinatown. Show all posts

Monday, February 5, 2024

The Phoenix Crown

The Phoenix Crown by Kate Quinn & Janie Chang, 400 pages

It's April 1906 and opera singer Gemma Garland has just arrived in San Francisco ahead of a series of performances in the Met's touring production of Carmen (in the chorus, but hey, it's still the Met!). When she gets into town, however, she learns that her friend, artist Nellie, with whom she was going to stay, has disappeared. Soon, however, Gemma has found herself a wealthy patron and is set to be the toast of the town. Meanwhile, orphaned Suling is doing everything she can to avoid her gambling-addicted uncle from selling her off in marriage. What neither Gemma nor Suling can predict, however, is the deadly earthquake that will destroy the city in the middle of all of their plans.

In the afterword to this book, the authors note that the more they learned about the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the more things they wanted to include in the book, and how hard it was to take things out. After trying to summarize it above, I'm realizing that they could have cut out several other elements to make it a bit less convoluted. The characters and overall plot were interesting (I'd definitely read a book about real-life botanist Alice Eastwood, fiction or nonfiction!), though I don't think the earthquake itself added much to the story as a whole — and considering the importance of setting in historical fiction, that's not a great thing. It was an interesting book, but it won't be topping my list of favorite historical fictions.

*This book comes out Feb. 13.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Razzmatazz

 

Razzmatazz by Christopher Moore  390 pp.

This is kind of a sequel to Moore's Noir, revisiting the characters Sammy "Two Toes" Tiffin and his girlfriend Stilton (aka The Cheese). The story is a convoluted tale of Chinese immigrants, prostitutes, Lesbians, drag queens, an overambitious anti-gay head of the vice squad, an alien (space type), and dragons of the mythological type all inhabiting post-WWII San Francisco. I can't really explain the connections between all the different elements but Moore makes it work. I admit to some confusion during the story but it all works out in the end. This is far from Moore's best work and doesn't come close to his Shakespeare satires but I enjoyed it. The theory of what caused the 1906 earthquake makes it worth reading.

Saturday, July 13, 2019

Natalie Tan's Book of Luck & Fortune

Natalie Tan's Book of Luck & Fortune by Roselle Lim (2019) 299 pages

Natalie Tan, estranged from her agoraphobic mother for 7 years, mostly because of her mother's refusal to accept her ambition to become a chef, returns to their home in San Francisco's Chinatown when she learns of her mother's death. Despite the odds against success, Natalie decides to reopen the long-closed restaurant that her grandmother (who'd died before Natalie was born) had run below her mother's living space.

Natalie's youth had been spent caring for her and her mother's needs because her mother wouldn't leave the building, which was so much responsibility on her young shoulders. She hated the father she'd never known for his absence and resented their neighbors for not helping more. However, when she moves back, her time with the various neighbors ‒ whose shops are no longer thriving ‒ surprisingly reminds her of many happy interactions she'd had with them in the past. One of them, a seer, reads her fortune. Natalie's wish is to help the neighbors while working on her own business. It's clear that her cooking talent rivals her grandmother's; food has a delicious part in this fairy-tale-like story.