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Kirkus Weighs In

Starred Review

"Forget Sorrow: An Ancestral Tale"  WW Norton, May10, 2010

East meets West in this occasionally playful yet profoundly moving graphic memoir.

Though she has drawn from her life in her popular children's books (Foo, the Flying Frog of Washtub Pond, 2009, etc.), Yang has never offered the level of psychological reflection and familial revelation shown here. The subtitle, "An Ancestral Tale," tells only half the story. The author narrates her own story, which encompasses the story of her father, who tells the story of his ancestors that his daughter then mediates through her artistry. The impetus for the project is the stalking of the thoroughly modern and Americanized author-then a recent college graduate-by a former boyfriend referred to throughout as "Rotten Egg." To protect herself from what appears to be the real threat of physical harm, she retreats to the home of her far more traditional parents, who emigrated from China before her birth.

 

She also makes a pilgrimage to her family's homeland, where she attends the Academy of Traditional Chinese Painting and experiences the late 1980s political upheaval and repression firsthand. Returning to her family's house in California, where her parents claim that she has wasted her education because of her bad boyfriend experiences, she coaxes stories from her father on his family, which are filled with tales of familial conflict and oppression that resonate with her own feelings of living in a prison imposed by circumstances.  It's a tale of Taoism and Buddhism, with the meditative state wondrously captured by the artist, and of the tension between the seeming passivity that spirituality appears to instill in some and the personalambitions of others.  The narrative seamlessly shifts between present and past, and between America and China, mixing the intimacy of a memoir with the artist's visual allusions to such sources as King Lear and The Scream.

A transformational experience for author and reader alike.

 

Belle Yang book trailer on Youtube, showing her painting a page from "Forget Sorrow: An Ancestral Tale."

Raves (official pub date May 10, 2010):

Starred Kirkus Review

Publisher's Weekly

Booklist

Giant Robot

Paul Gravett

View slide show of art from the graphic memoir.

 

Comments
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Belle, this sounds wonderful

and has the ring of the legendary. A source of social, psychological and historic insight.

A story to enthrall now and a gift to future generations. I feel sure it's destined for great success.

Lovely to hear from you BTW. Was only thinking at the weekend that I must get in touch to see how you are.

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I am back from eye surgery and feeling pretty good

Thanks for your thoughts.  Kirkus is the industry standard.  Don't know what would be comparable in the UK.  Librarians, agents, publishers read it.  The reviews are anonymous, so they can be scathing.  This is the first hoop and many more to jump.  And thank you for keeping us posted on Cheryl Snell.  I hope she will be fully mobile soon.  I have her Memento Mori collection.

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This is such a wonderful

This is such a wonderful review, and I was unaware of the "you" in this story, having focused more on the ancestral tale part.

How wonderful, how lovely to have such nice words before the book makes its debut.

Love to you and kudos on this much earned praise.

Best,

J

Jessica Barksdale Inclan
www.jessicabarksdaleinclan.com