Sylvie Lee is missing. She is Amy’s bright, beautiful and highly successful older sister who returned to Holland because their grandmother was gravely ill. See, Sylvie, along with her grandmother, was sent to live with her aunt and uncle, Helena & Willhem Tan, when she was a baby and rejoined her family in New York when she was nine and Amy was two. Her grandmother subsequently died and Sylvie was expected back home a week ago but no one seems to know where she is. Amy departs for Holland to try and find her, learning so much along the way to make her question whether she truly ever knew the sister she reveres.
This is a multigenerational story that is about so much more than locating a missing person, which is what I thought this would be. We’re provided three narratives: Amy, the younger sister; Sylvie Lee; and, Ma, their mother. There are a host of secondary characters who are part of this frame and instrumental in shaping all three women. The most impactful aspect of the story is the ever evolving identity of Sylvie Lee. She’s driven by a number of forces that’s made her excel in everything she’s ventured and things appear to have shifted. Those shifts provide textured layers to what I had first believed to be a fairly two-dimensional story.
My book club selected this for discussion and after our meeting, I raised my rating. There are deep themes that I hadn’t considered, giving the story so many additional angles to consider. We had a robust discussion about the Dutch and Asian cultures, racism, immigration, abandonment and displaced affections among others. Even the title has a more nuanced meaning. While I found the transitions between narratives often choppy and awkward, they didn’t lessen the power of the characterizations and messages. I’m glad three narrators were used for the audio version because they delivered their characters’ voices in the cultural aspects of where they were most formed. I have to believe it was deliberate as it was effective. This is a complicated story with really interesting, culturally diverse and complex characters.
Book Info
- Release Date: June 4, 2019
- Narrators: Angela Lin, Samantha Quan & Caroline McLaughlin
- Audio Length: 11 hours, 19 minutes
- Publisher: HarperAudio
Fab review Jo sounds like a interesting listen!
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Thank you, Nicki💜 Very much so!
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Wonderful review, Jonetta! Glad the audio version was a success for you and that the book club enjoyed the story.
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Thank you, Marialyce💜 Wish you could have been there as we had some very critical discourse about the book that collectively we resolved! It was an amazing discussion and just about all of us changed our initial ratings. Your sentiments would have added value.
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Another where it sounds better than maybe the read. Performance is everything with multi pov and this one sounds like it hit all the right notes.
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I think so, Alexandra. I have the eBook, too, and went back to read the last couple of chapters and found it confusing. Not the experience I had listening to it specifically because of the narrators.
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Some books are better ‘read’ out loud, as the performance brings them to life. I would love for there to be a Radio channel doing just the theatre of books. Now *that* I could get behind!
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We used to have an NPR program airing locally that did just that. *sigh* It went by the wayside years ago.
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Yes this would make a great book club selection! Nice review! 😍🙌
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Thank you, Carol💜
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This sounds great, and I love it when the narrators for each of the characters all have their own voice! 💖
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DG, it was like they intuitively knew what the author wanted or they had fully developed notes or something.
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