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Paperback How to Cook a Dragon: Living, Loving, and Eating in China Book

ISBN: 158005255X

ISBN13: 9781580052559

How to Cook a Dragon: Living, Loving, and Eating in China

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

When Linda Furiya decided to move to China with her boyfriend at the age of thirty, she hoped to find romance and ethnic kinship. Expecting common ground with locals as an Asian American, Furiya struggled with her ambition as a food writer in a nation where notions of race and gender are set in stone. During the six years she lived in Beijing and Shanghai, Furiya experienced a wide range of experiences--loneliness, isolation, friendship, and love--tied...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Touchingly Honest

Linda Furiya is understandably hesitant when her boyfriend, working in Beijing, asks her to abandon her life in the States and come to China with him. But she decides to dive in, and ends up spending the next several years of her life in Beijing and Shanghai, where she learns Mandarin, pursues her dream of being a freelance writer, and above all, eats. And while the local cuisine is a central concern for her (each chapter ends with a recipe), Furiya lets her memoir range far beyond her most recent meal. She deals with the stress of being a Japanese-American in China, where she is continually taken for a Chinese and expected to speak Mandarin; she describes the ups and downs of leaving everything she knows to move to a foreign country; and she captures her tumultuous relationship with her boyfriend, Eric. Furiya's style is not impeccable. Her word choice can leave something to be desired, and her metaphors are sometimes strained. But she won me over with her vulnerability in describing her relationship; she does not spare herself when she analyzes the mistakes she made and her growing distance from the person she wanted to be. "How to Cook a Dragon" says a bit about cooking, and a bit about "the sleeping dragon," China, but these things are ultimately viewed through their association with Furiya's life, an angle that works well to broaden the book's appeal beyond just foodies or Sinophiles. This memoir is not perfect, but the author's warmth and honesty shine through. ~

Charming and evocative

In the followup to the lovely Bento Box in the Heartland, Linda Furiya takes the reader on a journey through her eye opening experiences living in Beijing and Shanghai. The book is a soulful examination of culture and expectations (what's it like to be American, of Japanese heritage, in a country where everbody assumes you're just like them?), a frank exploration of love and relationships, and a celebration of the people -- and the food -- of China. A wonderful accomplishment and an entertaining read.

A Literary and Culinary Feast

Linda Furiya's first food memoir, "Bento Box in the Heartland" was a telling account of the hardships she faced as a minority growing up in middle America. Her honest and revealing stories about crossing cultures between her family's Japanese customs and her friends' and classmates' perspectives were unique and thought-provoking. When I picked up her second food memoir, "How to Cook a Dragon", about her time in China, I wondered how this new memoir would compare to her first. I wasn't disappointed. In fact, where Furiya's first book revealed much about her childhood, her second addresses adult issues that are that much more difficult to deal with when halfway across the world, in a country with a foreign language and culture. "How to Cook a Dragon" is one of the most honest China memoirs I've read. For anyone who has lived abroad without an established support network, "How to Cook a Dragon" will resonate well. The book will also be enjoyed by anyone who has an interest in China or who has taken a gamble with love. Like "Bento Box", the recipes at the end of the book are a nice feature--delicious and not too difficult to prepare. As such, the reader should beware: don't read on an empty stomach unless the ingredients in the recipes are close at hand.
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