by Eve J. Chung
(11/26/2023)
Daughters of Shandong is a gripping, and at times heartbreaking debut novel, based on the true story of author Eve Chung's grandmother during the years of the Chinese civil war. While readers may be aware of Chinese culture's historical misogyny, Chung brings to life the daily horrors of being a girl—"just another mouth to feed'—in a society that overwhelming favored male children. The book begins in 1948, just after the end of World War Two, as the Communist Revolution sweeps through the country.
Hai is the eldest child of the eldest male son in a prosperous family, and unfortunately, she is a girl. She lives with her parents and three younger sisters in her paternal grandparent's home, ruled with emotional cruelty by her vicious grandmother, who blames Hai's mother for failing to produce a male heir. The Angs have been landowners for several generations, and as the Communists move in, the family flees, leaving behind Hai's mother and the four girls. As the only representative of the Ang family they can find, the Communists publicly beat the eleven-year-old Hai to within an inch of her life. As soon as they are able, Hai's mother takes the girls, and everything they can carry, to try to reunite with the rest of the family. The bulk of the novel describes in crushing detail the two years they spent crossing the country, impoverished and starving, along with hundreds of thousands of refugees like themselves.
What shines through in this book is the resilience of Hai, her mother, and her sisters. No spoilers here, but there is a happier ending in store for the women of this family. I highly recommend Daughters of Shandong to all readers, not just those who love historical fiction.