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Tan Weaves Family Mystery Into 'Valley Of Amazement'





Amy Tan's latest novel, The Valley of Amazement, will be published on Tuesday.



Rick Smolanagainst/Against All Odds Productions

Amy Tan was 200 pages into a new novel when she attended a large exhibition on Shanghai life in the early 1900s. While there, she bought a book she thought might help her as she researched details on life in the old city. Then she stopped turning pages when she came upon a group portrait.


"It's called the 10 Beauties in Shanghai," she said. These were the winners of a citywide beauty contest for courtesans. There, staring solemnly at the reader, were 10 young women, half of them dressed in similar outfits—snug silk jackets with high, fur-lined collars, and three-quarter length sleeves which displayed long, white sleeves worn under the jacket. Several of them were wearing tight headbands embroidered with pearls. The shape of the headbands brought the wearer's forehead to a comely "V" shape, and the tension pulled the eye upward, into the much-desired Phoenix Eye shape. The wardrobe and the look were all part of the courtesan's official ensemble.


Tan stared at the photo again. There was something about it that was disturbingly familiar.


Then she remembered the photograph of her grandmother, the long-suffering family matriarch that she kept on her desk for inspiration. She's so attached to the picture; Tan carries a copy of the image on her mini-tablet. She pulls it out to show me.



And there, staring straight at me, is a young woman dressed exactly like the richly-garmented 10 Beauties.


Well, the next natural inquiry is "um, does this mean?...." and let it hang.


A picture and a mystery


Tan says absent a diary or some other incontrovertible piece of evidence, all one can do is speculate. Family history says her grandmother married late, had two children (Amy's mother and uncle) and was widowed when her husband died in the 1918 Influenza pandemic. She then went to live with her brother, but, Tan says, he was cheap, and provided her and the children with only the barest of necessities.


Did Tan's grandmother become a courtesan because she needed the money?


Or maybe it wasn't that at all. Maybe the image reflects something else altogether. Maybe she took the daring step of entering a Western photographer's studio (where no proper young Chinese woman would ever be caught) and had her photograph taken in courtesan's clothing for shock value.


Even the most innocuous speculation, though, was too much for Tan's relatives still in China. "They were very upset that I could even bring up such a notion," she says. In the end, it remains a mystery, in deference to family peace.


"I never have trouble cutting pages."


Tan dumped her 200 completed pages and began again. (That's the equivalent of a modest-sized book, but Tan wasn't fazed: "I never have trouble cutting pages.") She crafted her own story of how a woman like her grandmother, from a good family, who suddenly finds herself needing support, would go about making a life for herself. Because back then, "if you don't have family that are willing to take you in, you're stuck," she points out. "If your family all have died in famine, or fire or political insurrection—you have nothing."


The Valley of Amazement is the book that resulted from Tan's do-over. It's an opus that covers half of a tumultuous century, ranges across two continents, and involves love, deceit, forgiveness, and, ultimately, redemption.



Tan created the story of Lucia Minturn, a headstrong young woman from a family of bourgeois San Francisco intellectuals, who meets a handsome Chinese artist under her parents' roof and falls in love. The feeling is mutual, but when the artist returns home Lucia, abandoning all propriety, follows him to Shanghai. She quickly discovers he will not buck his rigidly traditional family, even though she's pregnant with their first grandchild. To support herself and her daughter, Violet, Lucia Minturn establishes a first-class courtesan house. In the chaos that follows the Qing Dynasty's collapse, Lucia is separated from Violet and when she is of age, Violet becomes one of Shanghai's most famous courtesans.


A deeper, different view of an ancestor


There are familiar Tan themes throughout The Valley of Amazement: family estrangement, mother-daughter angst, the displaced feeling of being considered "other" in a new environment. And there is rich detail of life in the early 1900s, both in San Francisco and in Shanghai.


Her copious research gave Tan a fuller understanding of what her grandmother's daily life must have been like in China, and broadened her perception about who her grandmother must have been. Her grandmother never got around to telling her own story—she committed suicide as a young woman, after what she considered an unforgivable betrayal. But Amy Tan feels The Valley of Amazement might add another dimension to the family lore: "she was more than just a wife and a mother who cried a lot," Tan emphasized. "What I imagined in my mind is whether she would have been pleased that I knew she had more gumption, more style and more attitude than the stories that had been told about her."



Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/11/04/242926707/tan-weaves-family-mystery-into-valley-of-amazement?ft=1&f=1032
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