Mention Books During Bitter Melon

ISBN: 1606841262 (ISBN13: 9781606841266)
Edition Language: English
Setting: San Francisco, California(United States)
Books Download Online Bitter Melon  Free
Bitter Melon Hardcover | Pages: 309 pages
Rating: 3.81 | 1290 Users | 265 Reviews

Explanation Concering Books 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.

Present About Books Bitter Melon

Title:Bitter Melon
Author:Cara Chow
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 309 pages
Published:December 28th 2010 by EgmontUSA
Categories:Young Adult. Realistic Fiction. Contemporary. Romance. Teen. Cultural. Historical. Historical Fiction

Rating About Books Bitter Melon
Ratings: 3.81 From 1290 Users | 265 Reviews

Evaluate About Books Bitter Melon
Any book thats put out by an Asian-American, especially if its young adult, Ill probably attempt to read somewhere down the read. This sort of culturally specific/finding ones own way out of their upbringing and therefore leading to a discovery of their own voice/identity is not high up on my list of themes I love to read about. But I decided to give it a chance.Frances was extremely irritating to me. She was selfish, wish-y wash-y, and pretty dense for a lot of the book. I was quite happy when

WARNING!!! CONTAINS SPOILERS.1. The novel "Bitter Melon" by Cara Chow is about a Asian girl named Frances who is on her senior year of high school. She is poor, and lives in a small town in San Francisco with her mom. Her mom is very strict and puts a lot of pressure on her. Also, she works very hard to educate Frances well. In respond to that, Frances has always been a respectful girl who obeys what her mom tells her to do. She studies hard to go to Berkely and become a doctor as her mom wishes

For Frances, a young Chinese-American girl who lives in a dilapidated apartment with her mother, the pressure to succeed and fulfill her mothers dreams for her is almost too much to bear. Though Frances is an excellent student, her mother is constantly pushing her to more and more rigorous feats of academics, hoping that one day Frances will become a doctor and take care of her financially. But though her mother is ostensibly looking out for Frances welfare, she can be very abusive and

Frances' life reminded me of the many tales I've heard of my parent's generation of Jewish children growing up in places like the Lower East Side or the Bronx: their parents sacrificed and scrimped so that the next generation could do better, achieve more, and only certain schools and the highest grades, the most correct behavior was allowed. Who needs sports? Who needs dates? That Bitter Melon is set in 1989, rather than 1939 (or earlier) is what will surprise readers. Aren't we supposed to be

I've got to admit, I didn't like this book much. I was extremely intrigued with the premise, though. The first pages were refreshing in their clear language and accurate portrayals of relationships and friendships. And then Frances met Derek. And everything started spiraling from there.Derek's description of being a Greek God and his girlfriend - although her personality seems questionable - apparently has the beauty of a Muse. Although Frances is lauded by her mother and friend as being witty

Baby's first tweenage immigrant angst novel. I appreciated how emotionally raw it was, but that rawness also made it in some ways a flawed, myopic narrative. Read like someone's r/relationships grudge post but with less of the juicy drama and sense of irony that makes a story like that worth reading.

"Bitter Melon" by Cara Chow is timely. With the recent publication of the controversial New York Timer Best Seller, "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" by Amy Chua, which "...imparts the secret behind the stereotypical Asian child's phenomenal success: the Chinese mother," the topic of the successful Asian child is much talked about. In "Bitter Melon," Chow tells us the story from the perspective of the Asian child. Frances Ching/Fei Ting lives with her mother (her father has passed away from