Customer Reviews for

Water Ghosts: A Novel

Average Rating 5
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  • Posted February 10, 2011

    Unforgettable!!!

    How I loved this novel!!!!I am reading this again, which is something I seldom do.I can so envision this as a MOVIE with a sensitive director.There are not enough books written about early chinese immigrant life in the Sacramento ,Ca, Delta region through the chinese perspective.I would hope this novel might encourage readers to help promote preservation of some of the historical buildings still standing in these areas before they are lost.Thankyou again Shawna,for your beautiful book.I am so looking forward to your next!!!!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 15, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    Ethereal and unique

    Shawna Yang Ryan's debut novel is a beautiful, heartbreaking look at a forgotten segment of American history. Every one of Ryan's characters - Corlissa, Sophia, Richard, Howar, Chloe, Poppy, Ming Wai - has been lovingly rendered to the point that the prose of the novel becomes tactile, almost real. You can taste the salt Ming Wai leaves behind, feel the heaviness of the air as Corlissa works; a major sensory focus of the writing is smell and scent. The book covers a space of only a few months in 1928 but the narrative loops back and forth, like interconnected short stories, and changes narrators when convenient so that all the stories are eventually brought to the reader's attention. Intertwined with the story of the boat women are tales from Chinese folklore and mythology and this contributes to the "ghost story" feel of the novel. There is also an ethereal quality to the work but instead of floating in air it's like floating under water, like the rippling of silk; the characters struggle to float free of their pasts, to avoid sinking under the town of Locke, California. While the political climate and laws of immigration in 1928 are not directly a focus of the narrative, ideas regarding sexuality, morality, racism, and culture lie beneath the characters' stories; the whitegirl brothel, the lack of ethnic Chinese women among the immigrant community (only merchants could obtain a visa to bring a wife to the US from China), the mix of Christian ideology with Chinese tradition, and the notion of honor all come to play in the novel. I particularly enjoyed Ryan's debut novel (originally published as Locke 1928 by El Leon) and I hope her next published work isn't very far in the future.

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