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Sour Sweet

By: Material type: TextTextDescription: 287pISBN:
  • 9780952419327
DDC classification:
  • F/MO
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
General Books General Books Colombo F/MO Available

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Shortlisted for Booker Prize 1982 CA00027614
General Books General Books Colombo F/MO Available

Order online
Shortlisted for Booker Prize 1982 CA00027615
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Timothy Mo's classic account of feuding Chinese families in sixties London quickly became a best-seller when it was first published and has since won its place among the novels of the time. Filmed by Mike Newell with a screenplay by Ian McEwan, it now appears for the first time on the Paddleless list.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Kirkus Book Review

The Chens are immigrants from Hong Kong living in London. Chen, the husband and father, is a waiter in a Chinese restaurant at the start; but when goaded by spunky wife Lily, he makes a risky leap and opens his own take-out kitchen in an old garage--and is soon catering to lorry drivers who are insatiably hungry for the sweet-and-sour dishes that no self-respecting Chinese would touch. Chen and Lily have a small son, Man Kee--who grows up attracted to gardening and vegetarianism; also sharing the meager quarters behind the kitchen and front counter is Lily's fat older sister Mui--a household nonentity who seems to have a livelier life elsewhere in London (her pregnancy soon becomes too advanced to be hidden); later, the family group is joined by Chen's old father, who is shipped to England when his other children don't want him. And eventually, to meet previous obligations back in Hong Kong, Chen is forced to borrow money, then loses it in a foolish attempt to double it by gambling; so, through misadventure, is he unwittingly used by a fellow-waiter as a front for the other man's drug-running for a local criminal organization, the Hung family. Chinese/British writer Mo, new to the US, intersperses the daily doings of the Chens with the mores and martial-art savageries of the Hung gang. (""The man went for the knife in his belt. Jackie Fung threw his pall over the swordsman's face, found the socket with his long thumb, and gouged into the eyeball. The man fell back with a cry, covering his face."") But this technicolor, Kung-Fu sinisterism is not nearly as effective as the immigrant-adjustment comedy of the earnest Chens: first acquaintance with the tax man; a trip to the Channel; driving a banged-up van only Lily masters, the ""Infernal Carapace""; killing a live turkey. Deft and affectionate, then, when focusing on the family, but less successful in its melodrama and Chinese-gang sociology. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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