Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
Gold Mountain Blues
Unavailable
Gold Mountain Blues
Unavailable
Gold Mountain Blues
Ebook719 pages13 hours

Gold Mountain Blues

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

One Family.
Five generations.
An epic story of love and loss.

China, 1879
With the Opium wars at their height, Fong Tak-Fat boards a ship to Canada, determined to make a life for himself and support his family back home. He will endure great hardship as he works to build the Pacific Railway and save every penny he makes to reunite his family.

Canada, 2004
Amy Smith knows nothing of her family history, a secret her mother will not share, until she is summoned to her ancestral home in China to collect the forgotten belongings of family members whom she has never met. Can Amy finally unlock the door to her past?

Telling the story of one family's journey through five generations and across the seas, Gold Mountain Blues is a heartrending tale of sacrifice, endurance, hope and survival.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherCorvus
Release dateMay 4, 2017
ISBN9780857896742
Unavailable
Gold Mountain Blues
Author

Ling Zhang

Professor Ling Zhang is currently with the Department of Computer Science at Anhui University in Hefei, China. His main interests are artificial intelligence, machine learning, neural networks, genetic algorithms and computational intelligence.

Related to Gold Mountain Blues

Related ebooks

Sagas For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Gold Mountain Blues

Rating: 4.357142857142857 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

7 ratings2 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Gold Mountain Blues by Ling Zhang is an extraordinary read and page turner. The novel is a fictional family saga set in China and Canada, spanning 125 years from 1879 to 2004, with vivid stories about life and death, love and hate of the Fong Family.The multi-generational epic starts with Amy Smith, the fourth generation of a Chinese immigrant, who visits her family mansion in China. Among the different artefacts found in the house, an opium pipe helps trace back to the early years of the Fong family and their eldest son, Ah-Fat's youth as a farm boy in Hoi Ping County of Guangdong Province. To help his family out of poverty, Ah-Fat leaves for Gold Mountain. His pigtail cut is a sign of cultural conflict, but not because of the Xinhai Revolution. Then a woman's old jacket and pair of silk stockings tell the story of Ah-Fat who returns to his hometown for an arranged marriage several years later.Reading the letters discovered in the house, Amy learns about Ah-Fat's life in Vancouver and his wife with two children in Hoi Ping. Years later, Kam Shan, their eldest son joins his father farming in Canada. Kam Shan is, by inadvertence, involved in Dr. Sun Yat-sen's revolution, and the loss of his pigtail leads to his temporary disappearance. The second son, Kam Ho, also joins his father in Canada. During the Second World War Kam Ho enlists in Canadian Army and dies in France.The photo Amy has brought with her links to the story of her mother, Yin Ling, the third generation of The Fong family, and Amy herself as the third generation of the unmarried women in the Fong Family. The reason for being unmarried is either being rejected by Chinese traditions or objecting the traditions. The novel ends with Amy making a surprising decision.The epic portrays a historically true picture of the Fong family that gradually becomes affluent in the village as the financial support provided by their family members through hard work in Gold Mountain at the cost of the family dispersion. After the Chinese communists' takeover, the lives of the three generations of the Fong family come to a violent end in a rink, leaving the five-story mansion haunted for decades.The novel is developed with historical facts and events, such as building the Canadian Pacific Railway, early years of Chinatowns in Victoria and Vancouver, the Chinese head tax, Sun Yat-sen's Revolution, Sino-Japanese War and the Land Reform Movement in China.The setting is sophisticated. Through Amy Smith's eyes, the storyline goes back and forth between the present and past and between China and Canada. This story isn't only about the Chinese Canadian family, but also about this family's relationships with Caucasians and Native Indians.Gold Mold Mountain Blues is one of the best novels I've ever read, emotionally touching and compelling, with an intriguing plot, dramatic scenes and intricate characters. Suspense and O. Henry-style surprise are built throughout the novel.If you enjoy this novel, you would like to read the following novels: The Rice Sprout Song by Eiling Chang, Field of Life and Death and Tales of Hulan River by Hong Xiao and One Hundred Years Of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A 519 page saga about 5 generations of a family from Guandong Province in China, Gold Mountain Blues begins in the 1870s as teenaged Fong Tak-Fat, like thousands of his countrymen, sets sail for British Columbia. Drawn by the possibility of a better life, these migrant workers, many married with children, leave behind wives, mothers and children for years of almost penal servitude. Fong becomes one of the coolies who daily risks his life to build, by hand, the Pacific Railway. Ms Zhang’s list of research materials testify to the scholarly quality of her project. But this academic approach might have been better employed in writing a non-fiction chronicle of the West Coast Chinese. I experienced Gold Mountain Blues as a linear narration of events, interrupted occasionally by a modern day story of the descendant who returns to China to sign off her family’s claim to the family “fortress” so that it might be declared a World Heritage Site. Speaking as an east coast caucasian Canadian, I understand that as a chronicle the story excels. But again, from my vantage point, I feel that as a saga, it lacks the literary devices—foreshadowing, juxtaposition, mood, suspense, climax— that might have helped me, and perhaps other non-Asian readers, connect to these characters in a livelier way.P.S. Ms Zhang’s dedication features a phrase that profoundly summarizes her story in three verbs: to her parents who taught her “how to labour, to achieve and to wait.” 6.5 out of 10 Recommended to those who would enjoy a detailed narration of 19th and 20th century Canadian/Chinese history.