Status
Call number
Publication
DDC/MDS
813.54 |
Description
Biography & Autobiography. Nonfiction. HTML: In 1994, Anchee Min made her literary debut with a memoir of growing up in China during the violent trauma of the Cultural Revolution. Red Azalea became an international bestseller and propelled her career as a successful, critically acclaimed author. Twenty years later, Min returns to the story of her own life to give us the next chapter, an immigrant story that takes her from the shocking deprivations of her homeland to the sudden bounty of the promised land of America, without language, money, or a clear path. It is a hard and lonely road. She teaches herself English by watching Sesame Street, keeps herself afloat working five jobs at once, lives in unheated rooms, suffers rape, collapses from exhaustion, marries poorly and divorces. But she also gives birth to her daughter, Lauryann, who will inspire her and finally root her in her new country. Min's eventual successes-her writing career, a daughter at Stanford, a second husband she loves-are remarkable, but it is her struggle throughout toward genuine selfhood that elevates this dramatic, classic immigrant story to something powerfully universal..… (more)
User reviews
The Cooked Seed opens with Min's struggle to learn (or fake) enough English to get accepted into an American university and get a visa. But once here, more troubles ensued. Finding work was essential, but her limited English (a barrier to her studies) and the lack of a permanent work visa left her with few opportunities, and she soon found herself working five low-paying jobs just to get by. Even so, Min never lost sight of the fact that at least there were opportunities and choices, and she never lost faith in her belief that hard work would eventually bring rewards. In the years that followed, she experienced many hardships and disappointments: homesickness, loneliness, exhaustion, serious illness, rape, extreme poverty, racial intolerance, a bad marriage followed by divorce, and more. But eventually, she found her voice and began to write. And Lauryann, the child she had so desperately longed for, gave her a future worth living for.
About twelve years ago, I had the opportunity to host Anchee Min and her daughter when she was invited to speak on campus. As she describes in the book her pride in Lauryann's dancing (she had won many competitions for both ballet and folk dancing), I recalled how her talk ended with a little performance in which Lauryann took part. The love between mother and daughter was apparent; but I would not have guessed that this confident little girl (who was then about ten years old) would be going home to help install drywall and repair plumbing in the small, rundown apartment building they owned. Min explains that she needed to teach Lauryann to be independent and to know the value of hard work. Years later, it would be Lauryann who pushed her mother to "dig deeper" into her feelings about her past and to write this book as a means of helping other women who feel trapped in similar situations. "She was my repayment to America," Min writes.
Today, life means getting to know myself more, staying in touch with myself, making improvements upon myself, and, most of all, enjoying myself. The cooked seed sprouted. My root generated, deepened, and spread. I blossomed, thrived, and grew into a big tree.
The Cooked Seed is a moving and inspiring portrait of a woman who embodies the concepts of perseverance, determination, and resourcefulness in the face of great obstacles. Highly recommended.
That was Anchee (in Chinese, An-Qi) Min, left in the wake of China's Cultural Revolution to be a twentysomething with no potential.
I knew I wanted to read this memoir when I saw the author on CSPAN2/BookTV, in a segment from Chicago’s
And I got it in this memoir, where Min relates her struggles to learn English; to scrape together an education, a living and a family; to stay ahead of deportation back to China; literally to stay alive. And to sprout.
Lying awake at night, I asked myself the question, “Who are you, Anchee Min?” If I ever had a chance to learn what it meant to “stay positive,” it was now. I did not yet know the American I was becoming, but I was sure that I was no longer the same An-Qi from China. {…} I could be crushed, but I would not be conquered. And that, I concluded, was who I truly was. Who I would be.
This is one determined woman. There is intensely hard work, deplorable living conditions, desolation from the scams that catch her. And finally joy with her successes, particularly when she begins to write. The memoir reads like a literary marathon -- fast and practical and straightforward, which seems like Min herself -- though to me it slowed a bit when she got to easier times. Her passages about Chinese culture and the Cultural Revolution make me eager to read her prior memoir, Red Azalea, and I wager there’ll be no waning tension in those years.
(Review based on an advance reading copy provided by the publisher.)
It's a very well-written story, with an absolutely unique and intelligent voice. It will make you cry reading all the hardships she endured. She is a very strong will person that was not going to let anything stop her. I just don’t know how she was able to do all she did though out the years.
Very well written and truly fascinating. The Cooked Seed is story that is emotional and brutal you can’t put the book down. The abuse and torture she lived through is unbelievable and a true testament to her will to survive and make the most of the life she fought so hard to keep.
I would highly recommend this book.
Anchee is extremely judgmental. She criticizes:
Her deepest contempt is reserved for her ex, Qigu. He doesn’t seem like such a bad guy – shiftless, passive-aggressive, but not evil. Her behavior throughout their relationship is difficult to comprehend. Though he tells her that he doesn’t want kids, she deliberately gets pregnant by him. Anchee becomes convinced that he is a bad influence on their daughter, Lauryann, because he sleeps late, watches TV, and laughs when Lauryann doesn’t want to do math. So Anchee kidnaps their child and moves to California, effectively depriving Qigu of a relationship with his daughter. Then, she faults him for spoiling Lauryann on the rare occasion that he is able to see her. I ended up sympathizing with Qigu.
I suppose you could say that Anchee’s dream was to become an American. But she doesn’t seem to like America much, she just disliked China more. She went to college to become an artist, but not because she loves art, it’s just that the Art Institute of Chicago was the only place that would accept her. She wants to be loved, but wastes years with a man that doesn’t love her because she’s worried that her prince will never come. For many pages, I wondered, what does she care about? Do I need to care about someone who doesn’t care about anything?
After a child insults her because she’s Chinese, she decides that her goal is to “introduce China and its people to Americans” through her books. And here’s where the book becomes interesting. For a few pages, she describes the catharsis of writing about her past, and her passion is electrifying. But all too soon we’re back to her mundane day-to-day existence.
The rapturous reviews on the book’s back cover give me pause. There are people that my sister loves that I hate. And a memoir is basically a person telling you about themselves. My dislike is, I think, personal. The author is just someone I wouldn’t get along with. But I wouldn’t tell my sister not to read The Cooked Seed. She might like it. You might, too.
Having read and enjoyed Empress Orchid and Pearl of China (both 4 stars), I was looking forward to reading The Cooked Seed, before Anchee Min comes to our literary festival in March. Unfortunately her memoir didn't involve me in the same way that
Although I hadn't read the first installment, Red Azalia, this wasn't a problem as Ms Min's life in China was covered in the first 10% of The Cooked Seed. I think her early life would have been a more interesting read than her life as a struggling immigrant student in America, whose main worry was obtaining the Green Card and the right to remain in the country. While I can sympathise with her concerns, it didn't make for very exciting reading.
When Anchee Min arrived in America in 1984, she spoke no English. Her first 6 months were spent attending English classes to raise her knowledge of the language to a level where she could study. She scraped a living together by working five jobs at the same time and carried her Chinese/English dictionary everywhere. Her determination to succeed was amazing.
She made a number of mistakes - got conned out of her savings and then invested in a run-down tenement block with standing tenants, which involved a constant run of repairs and renewals. She made a lot of bad choices, including marrying a man who she didn't really love.
I don't know if it was the way the book seemed to turn into a series of anecdotes that left me underwhelmed, but the first half was definitely more interesting than the second and although I didn't struggle to finish, my interest had definitely waned.
I definitely plan to read Red Azalia at some time, however.