Bitter Melon by Cara Chow

bittermelon

There has been a lot of talk this week about a Wall Street Journal essay titled Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior. The essay is provocative and raises some very interesting and important questions. The author of the article, Amy Chau, essentially explores why Chinese parents stereotypically raise successful children. Cara Chow, the Chinese-American author of the YA novel, Bitter Melon, tackles the very same issue raised in the article but presents the story from the child’s point of view.

Summary of Bitter Melon:

Frances, a Chinese-American student at an academically competitive school in San Francisco, has always had it drilled into her to be obedient to her mother and to be a straight-A student so that she can go to Med school.  But is being a doctor what she wants?  It has never even occurred to Frances to question her own feelings and desires until she accidentally winds up in speech class and finds herself with a hidden talent.  Does she dare to challenge the mother who has sacrificed everything for her?  Set in the 1980s.

From Publishers Weekly:

Frances lives to please her mother, pushing herself for top grades so that she can get into Berkeley and become a doctor. But at the start of her senior year, she is mistakenly scheduled for speech class, where she learns she is a natural at public speaking, and she begins to question the path her mother has outlined for her. “If you eat bitterness all the time, you will get used to it. Then you will like it,” Frances’s mother tells her, referring to the eponymous dish, a blatant metaphor for the tight confines of their life together. Frances begins to make choices for herself, first hiding them from her mother, but ultimately confronting her. Though the viciousness her mother displays at times strains credulity (as when she beats Frances with a speech trophy, telling Frances she wants her to die), teens will be able to identify with the intense pressure Frances is under to succeed. The story follows a foreseeable course, but debut novelist Chow’s descriptions, dialogue, and details of Chinese-American life in 1980s San Francisco shine, and Frances’s growth is rewarding. Ages 12 up. (Dec.)

Author Biography:

Cara Chow was born in Hong Kong and grew up in the Richmond district of San Francisco, where Bitter Melon is set.  She attended an all girls’ Catholic high school, competed in speech, and had an encouraging speech coach, which served in part as the inspiration for her novel.  She was a PEN Emerging Voices Fellow in 2001. In addition to writing, Cara also teaches Pilates. She currently lives in the Los Angeles area with her husband and son. Bitter Melon is her first novel.

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