Daughters of the Sun and Moon

In Daughters of the Sun and Moon, Lisa See (Lady Tan's Circle of Women) tells her story, set in 1870s Los Angeles, through three women's perspectives, giving readers a multifaceted look into life in Lo Sang (as it's called by the Chinese community).

Petal, determined to return home to China, initially spends much of her time plotting to escape her life of indentured servitude at a local brothel. Although Moon has several advantages--literacy, a loving husband, satisfying work helping in his medical practice--she is always conscious of her doubly precarious position in the community as a Chinese woman. She feels protective of Dove, whose tightly restricted existence, bound "lily feet," and marriage to a much older man leave her vulnerable to the machinations of unscrupulous men. When simmering tensions, racial and otherwise, boil over on the night of October 24, 1871, the three women must band together to help one another survive.

See's narrative brims with historical detail, which includes the complicated racial dynamics present in a city that was home to Mexicans and Indigenous people as well as Chinese immigrants and white settlers. She writes unflinchingly of the racism faced by people of color and the harsh immigration policies that made life more difficult for Chinese people, especially women, to build a life. Set against this stark backdrop, the women's friendship--often kept hidden from the men trying to restrict them--blooms beautifully in a harsh environment, like the chrysanthemum tea Petal serves her customers.

Poignant and fascinating, Daughters of the Sun and Moon is a heart-pounding frontier narrative and a tender tribute to female friendship. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams

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