Author : Ying Chang
Compestine
4th Grade and up
Revolution is Not a Dinner Party
Revolution
is Not a Dinner Party, Hardcover, English, Book,
Ying Chang Compestine, 4th Grade and up,
9780805082074,
$16.95
Nine-year-old
Ling is very comfortable in her life; her parents are both dedicated surgeons in
the best hospital in Wuhan. But when Comrade Li, one of Mao’s political
officers, moves into a room in their apartment, Ling begins to witness the
gradual disintegration of her world. In an atmosphere of increasing mistrust,
Ling fears for the safety of her neighbors and, soon, for herself and family.
Over the course of four years, Ling manages to grow and blossom, even as she
suffers more horrors than many people face in a lifetime. Drawing from her
childhood experience, Ying Chang Compestine brings hope and humor to this
compelling story for all ages about a girl fighting to survive during the
Cultural Revolution in China.
Listen to
Vienna Rose read Revolution is Not a Dinner Party to you. A marvelous example of the magical encounter
between a child and books that we wish for all children.
Publishers Weekly :
Starred Review. Picture book and cookbook author Compestine (The Real Story
of Stone Soup) turns to 1972 China as the setting for her first YA novel.
Eight-year-old Ling, the spunky daughter of two doctors, lives in Wuhan, China;
dreamy and idealistic, she often describes her world in metaphor (about her
neighbor, Ling notes, Mrs. Wong was fragrant and warm like a red peony, which
always welcomed visitors). But the lives of Ling and her family are disrupted
when Comrade Li, an officer of the Communist Party, moves into their apartment.
Difficulties mount as friends and neighbors disappear, Ling's father is arrested
and she endures vicious tormenting at school because of her bourgeois background
(At times I wished my family was poor and my parents worked on a vegetable
farm... so I could have friends. But if my parents worked on a farm, who would
treat their patients?). Although her father has been jailed, her family starved
and their books burned, Ling fights to keep her long hair, a symbol of dignity
and individualism to her, though her classmates see it as emblematic of Ling's
privilege. Ling survives on wit, hope and courage until the death of Chairman
Mao, after which she and her mother have a joyful reunion with Ling's father.
Readers should remain rapt by Compestine's storytelling throughout this gripping
account of life during China's Cultural Revolution. Ages 10-up.
Audiofile : The title belies the content of this riveting fictional account of
life in China under Mao. Told from the perspective of Ling, the young daughter
of two doctors, the story chronicles her fathers imprisonment, attacks by
schoolmates, betrayal by neighbors, and her sometimes painful relationship with
her mother. Jodi Longs portrayal of Maos dogmatic and screeching lieutenants is
scary, a feeling that is relieved by the fathers gentleness and Lings own
determination and resourcefulness. Longs voice sounds older than Lings might be
at 9 or even 13, when the story ends, but thats a quibble. Though the packaging
says recommended for ages 12 to 17, this short production should hold anyones
attention.
Booklist : Known for her picture books, Compestine grew up in China, during the Cultural Revolution, and her autobiographical novel tells the history from the viewpoint of the young, protected, privileged child who loses her innocence when political brutality invades her home. For nine-year-old Ling, things always seem clear. She's close to her loving father, who teaches her English and about freedom in America, but she feels distant from her tense, angry mother. During the course of four years, repression increases, and eventually the Red Guards arrest Dad as a class enemy. Ling feels the repression in other ways, too; she stands up to class bullies who try to cut off her "bourgeois" hair. Always she is sustained by memories of her brave father and his dream of freedom. In clipped lyrical sentences, Compestine's first-person narrative sets a naïve child's struggle to survive against betrayal and courage in one neighborhood and also the political panorama of spies and slogans.
English
Collection Ying
Chang Compestine Books :








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