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As the Earth Turns Silver (2009)

par Alison Wong

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13410203,570 (3.77)55
It is 1905 and brothers Yung and Shun eke out a living as greengrocers near Wellington's bustling Chinatown. The pair work to support their families back in China, but know they must adapt if they are to survive and prosper in their adopted home. Nearby, Katherine McKechnie struggles to raise her rebellious son and daughter following the death of her husband Donald. A strident right-wing newspaperman, Donald terrorised his family, though was idolised by his son. Chancing upon Yung's grocery store one day, Katherine is touched by his unexpected generosity. In time, a clandestine relationship develops between the immigrant and the widow, a relationship Katherine's son Robbie cannot abide. As World War I rolls on, and young men are swept up on a tide of macho patriotism, Robbie takes his family's honour into his own hands. In doing so, he places his mother at the heart of a tragedy that ill affect everyone and everything she holds dear"--Container.… (plus d'informations)
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Affichage de 1-5 de 10 (suivant | tout afficher)
A comienzos del siglo XX, en Nueva Zelanda, numerosos inmigrantes se establecieron en el bullicioso barrio chino de Wellington, donde los hermanos Yung y Shun se ganan la vida para poder mantener a sus familiares en China. Todos deben adaptarse si quieren sobrevivir y prosperar en su nuevo lugar adoptivo. Mientras, en la otra parte de la ciudad, Katherine McKechnie lucha por criar a sus hijos tras la muerte de su esposo Donald, un estridente periodista ultraconservador, idolatrado por su rebelde hijo adolescente Robbie y que tenía aterrorizada a toda la familia. Cuando Katherine conoce a Yung, se siente conmovida por su generosidad. Pronto inician una relación clandestina que Robbie no puede soportar. En vísperas de la I Guerra Mundial, mientras miles de jóvenes son arrastrados por una oleada de patriotismo, Robbie se apropia del honor de la familia. Y al hacerlo, coloca a su madre en el corazón de una tragedia que afectará a todos y a todo lo que resulta querido para ella...
  Natt90 | Mar 23, 2023 |
Well written and an excellent story. Give a picture of both NZ society and the way Chinese immigrants were treated at the beginning of the 20th Century. Part of our history that we NZers should be aware of. ( )
  kmstock | Mar 28, 2015 |
This is a debut novel for author Alison Wong. Set in Wellington New Zealand in the early twentieth-century it AS THE EARTH TURNS SILVER follows the intersecting lives of two people from two different cultures amid a time when racist policies were being presented to the New Zealand parliament. Chung Yung is a Chinese immigrant who helps his older brother run a fruit and vegetable shop in order to support their families back in China. Katherine McKechnie is struggling to raise two young children after the death of her tyrant of a husband. Katherine’s husband had been a tabloid reporter and supported the racist agitator and murderer Lionel Terry. Unfortunately he was able to implant his racist and intolerant attitude into his young son Robbie before he died.

Katherine buys her fruit and vegetables from the store owned by the Chung brothers. There she meets, make friends with, and gradually falls in love with Chung Yung, the younger brother. The resulting affair takes place at night once the children have gone to bed over the course of the next few years until the start of WWI. When Robbie joins up with the New Zealand Army and leaves to fight in Europe, and his sister goes odd to study to become a doctor. The couple finally feel that they could become more open about their relationship. But, as it is wont to do, fate steps in.

Alison Wong is a good writer. The controversial issues she covered such as racism, women’s suffrage and class are handled gently and skilfully. The story is not an in your face read, it plods gently along keeping you hooked until the end arrives, and that is where it came unstuck for me. The end was not a good end for me. Not because it was sad, but it seemed sudden and left me hanging, as if there was more to come but the author forgot to go back and finish. Maybe that was what she had planned all along. But it left me unsatisfied.
  sally906 | Apr 3, 2013 |
As the Earth Turns Silver won the New Zealand Post Book Award in 2010, and tells the intertwining stories of the unhappy McKechnie family and a pair of brothers from China, Yung and Shun, in the early 20th century in Wellington, New Zealand.

Overall it was a good read, but not as good as I'd been hoping. I like my plots more complex, and thought the ending was a bit of a cop out. Not a bad book by any means (the characters were good and believable, the background of New Zealand in the early 20th century was interesting, it was well written, and there was a veracity to the tale of Chinese immigrants to NZ). I think it's just a case of it being oversold to me. ( )
  wookiebender | Aug 6, 2011 |
Katherine is struggling to raise her two children Robbie and Edie, while trying to maintain a distance from her obnoxious husband Donald. Yung arrived in Wellington, New Zealand, when he was just 18 to help his older brother run his fruit and vegetable shop. Through their eyes we see early 20th century Wellington from two very different perspectives.

When Katherine is left widowed her acquaintance with Yung becomes friendship, which evolves into a love affair. But nothing is easy for this pair. Racism and prejudice against the Chinese immigrants is rife, and harsh race based policies are instituted by the government, requiring that Katherine and Yung's relationship remain behind closed doors.

With World War I looming, the specter of Donald returns through Robbie, who worshipped his father and inherited many of his opinions, and he causes Katherine yet more pain.

I really enjoyed this book, which was some 10 years in the writing. In her acknowledgements there’s an extensive bibliography and references to Wong’s own ancestor’s experiences in New Zealand. Her research and the years spent crafting this book have paid off as it reads as being very authentic, and gave me an insight into a different Wellington to the one I know.

That authenticity included a court room scene early in the book, where the sentiments expressed by the defendant left me feeling disgusted that such callous attitudes existed, and worse were actively supported.

As The Earth Turn Silver meanders through the years. Once out from Donald’s shadow, with Yung’s encouragement and the beginnings of a women’s movement shifting expectations, Katherine finally begins to live her life. Yung himself has a grace and dignity that allows him to still look on the world without bitterness, despite the treatment he and his family often receive.

The only disappointment was the ending which was quite sudden, and didn't really resolve Katherine’s story in a way that satisfied me.

Wong’s characters are fully realised and her writing style is beautifully subtle. This subtlety is evident in the tensions of Katherine’s family; through her quiet disdain for her husband or in a mother’s concern leading to the reemergence of a sister’s old jealousy.

This is an evocative book, which owes a lot to Wong’s success as a poet. While I was aware of the racism and political policies that early Chinese immigrants endured in New Zealand, the obvious research that went into this book helped me realise the full impact these policies had, not just on the Chinese but also on any European who was friendly with, or supported the Chinese. ( )
  SouthernKiwi | Jul 23, 2011 |
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It is strong material for a potentially enthralling and moving commercial novel, but Wong seems set on a more ponderous tone and has somehow managed to write an illicit love affair ending in a vicious murder that fails to have any dramatic tension whatsoever. Not all novels have to be page-turners, but the language Wong employs is so determinedly poetic, so wilfully evocative as to be essentially meaningless.
ajouté par europhile | modifierThe Guardian, Nicole Barr (Oct 9, 2010)
 
Poet Alison Wong is sure to win honours for her debut novel about colonial outsiders. The historical novel is as much an act of insight, imagination and redress as storytelling. The best examples perceptively and accurately portray the faults and fortes of our ancestors, and in so doing draw out parallels between us and them. Certainly, this is true of New Zealand poet Alison Wong’s first novel, As the Earth Turns Silver.
 
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For my father Henry Wong who did not live to see this come to fruition, for my mother Doris Wong and the generations that came before, and for my son Jackson Forbes and the generations that come after.
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It is a lonely place where the Jesus-ghosts preach.
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They had just turned into Tory Street, Past Mount Cook Police Station, Chung-shun and his younger brother Chung-yung, on their way to Haining Street for soupy wontons and noodles.
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It is 1905 and brothers Yung and Shun eke out a living as greengrocers near Wellington's bustling Chinatown. The pair work to support their families back in China, but know they must adapt if they are to survive and prosper in their adopted home. Nearby, Katherine McKechnie struggles to raise her rebellious son and daughter following the death of her husband Donald. A strident right-wing newspaperman, Donald terrorised his family, though was idolised by his son. Chancing upon Yung's grocery store one day, Katherine is touched by his unexpected generosity. In time, a clandestine relationship develops between the immigrant and the widow, a relationship Katherine's son Robbie cannot abide. As World War I rolls on, and young men are swept up on a tide of macho patriotism, Robbie takes his family's honour into his own hands. In doing so, he places his mother at the heart of a tragedy that ill affect everyone and everything she holds dear"--Container.

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