Showing posts with label memoir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memoir. Show all posts

Paper Daughter: A Memoir Review

Paper Daughter: A Memoir
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Paper Daughter: A Memoir ReviewPaper Daughter is a rich memoir of cultures crossing, as many reviewers have noted. It is also a valuable addition to the literature of class in America. But I find it has stayed with me most of all as a story about family, and especially about the terrible love that connects so many of us with our parents.
Mar's rendering of her early childhood in Hong Kong is beautiful, capturing the satisfaction of a child who feels safe, known, and well-cared-for; she describes her family's meager resources with care and no rancor, making clear that for her, the world was rich and complete. One of my favorite images in a long time is of little Man Yee arriving at school asleep, snuggled up against her mother's back for the walk there. And if there is one moment of plain peace in this novel, it is when Mar, having completed with her mother the arduous and anxious journey from Hong Kong, is reunited with her father at the airport. Nuzzling against him as heart contracted and released. This was my father, and he remembered me."
What felt to a little girl like an idyll for her family, one room in a crowded walk-up with uncertain plumbing, was of course not really tenable, and her parents were compelled to make the choices they did. And surely even if Mar's American acculturation had not divided her so painfully from her parents, something else would have. Who among us has not, at some time, looked around at her family, no matter how valued, and felt herself a stranger in a strange land? (After a recent reading from Paper Daughter, Elaine Mar told the audience that she believes that when she and her mother speak Chinese, she understands almost 100 percent of what her mother says, but her mother only understands about 70 percent of what Elaine says. Thinking of myself and my own mother, I thought "yep, that's about right," even though both my mother and I are native English speakers.)
Mar's is a classically American story, of upward class mobility and the distance it puts between a young woman and her immigrant parents. But in spite of its honest treatment of an isolation so overpowering it sometimes made her nearly suicidal, Paper Daughter is nevertheless a novel infused with loyalty, love, and humor. Mar's appreciation for detail, and especially for the contours of the heart's many hungers, helps her paint a picture in which every face holds beauty and sorrow.
There is no love more intense than the one that ties us to the parents who raise us, and there is no chasm deeper than the one that opens up between those parents and ourselves. We fight with each other desperately, perhaps just to keep from letting go altogether. In Mar's family, poverty, fear, and displacement added intolerable stress to the mix, as they do for too many families. Her parents feel she can never appreciate their sacrifices, and truly it seems that they can't understand her suffering either. Yet from this impasse Elaine Mar has created a book that honors both.Paper Daughter: A Memoir Overview

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Craving Grace: A Story of Faith, Failure, and My Search for Sweetness Review

Craving Grace: A Story of Faith, Failure, and My Search for Sweetness
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Craving Grace: A Story of Faith, Failure, and My Search for Sweetness ReviewShortly before I read Craving Grace, I read a profound blog post by Lisa that encapsulates exactly what her memoir succeeds in doing:
"To write one's self honestly -- to take a day, a month, a year, whatever, and record what actually happened -- is not a pretty experience. ...At a most basic level, each of us would like to believe that we are not so flawed as our actions would prove. We'd like to believe we are better, and we'd like to be seen as better. But the gospel of Christ can free us from the desire to masquerade. ...His light falls on and around and through our sinful realities, and that illuminated darkness is a story worth telling every time. His presence puts meaning in our unseemly and bare details, and makes them spellbinding."
([....])
That's the beauty of Craving Grace. As the spotlight falls on Lisa, most of the time, it doesn't flatter her. Instead, the stories she tells magnify Christ and the sweetness of His grace.
"Courageous" is one of the words that came to mind most frequently, in light of Lisa's transparency. For her to recount her deepest thoughts the way she did took a lot of humility. The specificity with which Lisa shares the ugliness of her heart is often uncomfortable--because it is familiar. But Lisa isn't just honest for authenticity's sake; she uses her stories to relate the beautiful truths she learned about God along the way.
A couple of concerns: First, it felt like Lisa was awfully derogatory toward her first book Saving My First Kiss: Why I'm Keeping Confetti in My Closet. In her desire to emphasize grace and tear down the "good Christian girl who has to earn God's favor" religion she'd built, she almost seemed to tear down what I think is still valid, not-necessarily-legalistic advice about purity and premarital relationships.
Second, while the gospel *was* very clear, Lisa seemed to define sin solely on a horizontal level. Any talk of sin was focused on screwing up in relationships with other people; there wasn't mention of the underlying idolatry, of sin as an offense against God. While I think that's a serious point of theology, I recognize this is a memoir, not a theological treatise.
Overall, it's a lovely book. The chapter titles alone were brilliant, and the writing delivered on what the table of contents promised. Many times I marked poignant turns of phrase and vivid metaphors. Lisa provides lots of sweet morsels to chew on in her narratives about encountering the God of extravagant grace.
[full disclosure: Tyndale House provided me with a complimentary copy of this book to review]Craving Grace: A Story of Faith, Failure, and My Search for Sweetness OverviewFor Lisa Velthouse's whole life, Christianity had been about getting things right. Obeying her parents. Not drinking. Not cursing. Not having premarital sex. Vowing to save her first kiss until she got engaged, even writing a book called . . . well, Saving My First Kiss. (This, it turns out, does not actually help a girl get a date.) Yet after two decades of trying to earn God's okay, she found her faith was lonely, empty, and unsatisfying. So she turned to more discipline, of course: fasting! By giving up her favorite foods—sweets—Lisa hoped to somehow discover true sweetness and meaning in her relationship with God. Until, one night at a wedding, she denied herself the cake but failed in such a different, unexpected, and world-rocking way that it challenged everything she thought she knew about God and herself. Craving Grace is the true story of a faith dramatically changed: how in one woman's life God used a bitter heart, a broken promise, and the sweetness of honey to reveal the stunning wonder that is grace.

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