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Butterfly's Child
Butterfly's Child
Butterfly's Child
Audiobook10 hours

Butterfly's Child

Written by Angela Davis-Gardner

Narrated by Jennifer Ikeda

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

Internationally acclaimed author Angela Davis-Gardner draws inspiration from Puccini's Madame Butterfly to craft this deftly imagined furthering of the famed opera's main characters. Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton and his wife Kate bring a three-year-old Japanese boy home to their Illinois farm. But when their neighbors learn the truth about the boy's heritage, the fallout is devastating. "In its way, it holds its own alongside the modern Western masterpieces of Larry McMurtry and Cormac McCarthy."-Kirkus Reviews
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 12, 2011
ISBN9781461800064
Butterfly's Child

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Reviews for Butterfly's Child

Rating: 3.6666666916666664 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

24 ratings6 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Madame Butterfly, the famous opera by Puccini is the driving force behind Butterfly's Child, the novel (the opera being based on a short story.) Ms. Davis-Gardner imagines the story behind the opera and presents it as it might have happened. From the beginning there is a feeling of both despair and hope mixed into the writing. Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton, a naval officer has his affair with Cio-Cio (Butterfly) and he leaves not knowing of the birth of his son. Butterfly sits waiting, knowing that he will return. He sends her money every month so he must care! When he does return though, it is on his honeymoon. In despair Butterfly sends a note to Frank and he arrives at her home to find her dead at her own hand with little Benji wailing. He and his wife decide to take the boy back to America and raise him as an orphan child they adopted while in Japan.Frank arrives back in America to take over the family farm. Benji is not warmly welcomed into the community. His obvious mixed race leads to bullying from both children and adults as he grows up; only a few people people embrace him. He clings to the few reminders he has of a childhood he barely remembers. Secrets never stay secrets forever and Benji's comes out to the detriment of all involved. Benji leaves determined to go back "home" to Japan but he learns along the way that he does not fit in there any more than he fits in with his American family. He must forge his place in life as he searches for the family he was forced to leave.This story of cultures clashing with an innocent child caught in the middle was well written and I found it hard to put down. Benji was an enterprising, enjoyable character. I was disappointed that his time in Japan and the ending seemed somewhat short changed compared to his time with his father in America. Once he finds his way to his place of birth the story seemed to lose its momentum. The detail so prevalent in the beginning was missing I suppose. Many questions were left unanswered so I do wonder if a sequel is planned and perhaps that is the reason.It was overall a fascinating look at small town America and its attitude towards Japan at the end of the 19th century. Not to mention the city vs. farm social structures and attitudes.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book that has been on my to read shelf for a couple of years, but it was not until this month that I decided to pick it up. The reason? My daughter just made her role debut in the opera Madama Butterfly!! The book became a must read NOW! I agree with other reviewers that the author did a good job of painting a picture of Midwest farm life and attitudes in the late 19th century, as well as researching both the time and place of both the US and Japan during this period. I encourage others to read interviews with the author about that aspect of the writing process. I was totally surprised by the final outcome of the novel and felt the author did a great job of capturing the reactions and feelings of the central characters. I highly recommend this book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I just finished Butterfly's Child.I was surprised to discover that this book is the continuation of the story of Madame Butterfly.I found the first 100 pages of the book difficult, not because they weren't written well, because they were, but because I didn't like any of the characters and that included the unfortunate little boy. I understand his life was turned on its head, but I felt to pity for him after a certain point. Then toward the 100th page I did and that's when the book picked up.It's a nice read and causes you to want to know how this all plays out.The ending is satisfying and if you're willing to trudge through the 100 pages is worth the read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    When you read a marvelous book and you close that last page, have you ever had the characters continue to live on in your head, going beyond the end of the tale the author told, living lives no one else has ever imagined? This certainly happens to me although not as much as it used to when I was younger. And it clearly happens for people who write fan fiction and sequels. Obviously the same thing happened for Angela Davis-Gardner and as a result of her inability to leave Cio-Cio and Pinkerton's small child tragically orphaned on the stage at the end of the opera Madame Butterfly, we have her marvelous and engrossing novel Butterfly's Child.As in the opera, the novel opens with Cio-Cio waiting for Lieutenant Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton's return to Japan, convinced that he will in fact come back to her and the son he never knew he had. But when he does return, it is with an American wife. Butterfly commits hairi-kiri out of love and desperation and Pinkerton and his devout wife Kate are left to decide young biracial Benji's fate. They choose to take him back to Illinois with them to their farm but instead of Pinkerton's claiming paternity, they say that Benji is an orphan whom they've adopted as is their Christian duty.Life is not easy on the farm. Pinkerton never planned to work on it, Kate wasn't raised as a farm wife, and Benji is desperately afloat in a culture he doesn't trust with people he doesn't know and who are having a hard time caring for him emotionally given the way he remains a constant reminder of Butterfly for both Pinkertons. Without the love and caring at home to build his sense of worth, the petty racism he encounters daily in the small town is terribly isolating. Only a few people treat him as a full, intelligent human being. And so he never stops dreaming of leaving Illinois and going back to Japan to find his mother's family. When the secret of his paternity leaks out in this provincial and small-minded town, the repercussions tear the Pinkerton family apart and Benji runs away to make his long desired journey back to Japan.The historical detail and accuracy of attitudes and beliefs are fantastic here. Davis-Gardner really captures the difficulty of being bi-racial at the turn of the 20th century, not only in the US but also in Japan. The hardship of working on a farm over tough years is realistically depicted. The Japanese areas of larger American cities are carefully detailed and brought to life. The casual racism of the time threads through Benji's everyday life just exactly as it would have, touching and soiling so much.In Benji, Davis-Gardner has created a sad, woeful character whose search for identity and acceptance is all external until he realizes that only by finding himself within will he finally be at ease in a world not amenable to people like him. Pinkerton is a fairly loathesome character and just as in the opera, the reader wonders what both Cio-Cio and then Kate could ever have seen in the man. Kate is very buttoned-up and constrained and she tries her hardest but she ultimately finds herself unable to rise above the prejudices of the day and her eventual succumbing to deep depression is a not unexpected fate for her. Pinkerton's mother, while gruff, is one of the more sympathetic characters as is Keast, the veterinarian who takes a real and heartfelt interest in Benji.The plot, starting with the end of the opera and growing from there, has a desultory feel to it, unspooling slowly toward a series of surprising climaxes. Benji's life in American with his father and stepmother draws out far longer than his adult life in Japan although the latter is equally as, or even more, interesting than his farm years. Just as Benji left them behind, Frank and Kate's stories are wrapped up tidily and fairly quickly in the end, the more interesting secondary characters are briefly mentioned, and the focus is solely on Benji again and the losses he's chosen to accept by only being one half of his heritage. A thoughtful and appealing tale that not only takes inspiration from the opera but also cleverly incorporates it into the tale itself, this search for self was a delight to read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Madame Butterfly, the famous opera by Puccini is the driving force behind Butterfly's Child, the novel (the opera being based on a short story.) Ms. Davis-Gardner imagines the story behind the opera and presents it as it might have happened. From the beginning there is a feeling of both despair and hope mixed into the writing. Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton, a naval officer has his affair with Cio-Cio (Butterfly) and he leaves not knowing of the birth of his son. Butterfly sits waiting, knowing that he will return. He sends her money every month so he must care! When he does return though, it is on his honeymoon. In despair Butterfly sends a note to Frank and he arrives at her home to find her dead at her own hand with little Benji wailing. He and his wife decide to take the boy back to America and raise him as an orphan child they adopted while in Japan.Frank arrives back in America to take over the family farm. Benji is not warmly welcomed into the community. His obvious mixed race leads to bullying from both children and adults as he grows up; only a few people people embrace him. He clings to the few reminders he has of a childhood he barely remembers. Secrets never stay secrets forever and Benji's comes out to the detriment of all involved. Benji leaves determined to go back "home" to Japan but he learns along the way that he does not fit in there any more than he fits in with his American family. He must forge his place in life as he searches for the family he was forced to leave.This story of cultures clashing with an innocent child caught in the middle was well written and I found it hard to put down. Benji was an enterprising, enjoyable character. I was disappointed that his time in Japan and the ending seemed somewhat short changed compared to his time with his father in America. Once he finds his way to his place of birth the story seemed to lose its momentum. The detail so prevalent in the beginning was missing I suppose. Many questions were left unanswered so I do wonder if a sequel is planned and perhaps that is the reason.It was overall a fascinating look at small town America and its attitude towards Japan at the end of the 19th century. Not to mention the city vs. farm social structures and attitudes.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I absolutely loved "Plum Wine," so of course I was hoping for something equally as wonderful. The premise of this most recent novel is an interesting one: it starts at the end of the story of "Madame Butterfly" and imagines what might have happened to the half-American, half-Japanese child that went off to America with Pinkerton after Butterfly has killed herself. After such a tragedy, how could things turn out well for this child (Benji), or even for Pinkerton and his new wife? As the reader finds out over the course of the novel, Benji has to overcome a series of cultural shocks as well as ambivalent parents and his main goal in life is to return to Japan to find his real family; Pinkerton is not only overwhelmed by the unexpected guilt he feels upon Butterfly's suicide but he also has to deal with a new life that he is totally unsuited for; and Kate, Pinkerton's new wife, is bewildered by Pinkerton's sudden change in behavior and feels incapable of adequately caring for his child.All that is plenty of fodder for a good story, but then things take a surreal turn when the opera "Madame Butterfly" debuts in Italy and begins to tour through the United States. The life of the Pinkertons becomes intolerable as they become the focus of small town gossip.Although this is a fairly well-written book, at times it feels a bit gimmicky, and the characters seem a bit cartoonish.