Several years ago, Lan Samantha Chang's magical and marvelous novella and short story collection HUNGER explored the sense of alienation, loss, and generational disjuncture of the immigrant experience in America. With INHERITANCE, she joins the ranks of Amy Tan, Anchee Min, Hong Ying, and Ha Jin as fictional chroniclers of Chinese history and the bridges Chinese people have constructed between their home country and America.
Lan Samantha Chang has crafted in INHERITANCE a sweeping novel whose characters lives' shadow the arc of 20th Century China, from the earliest days of the Republic to the modern era. Passing through the Japanese invasion, the Communist Liberation, the Cultural Revolution, the Taiwanese diaspora, and the opening to the West, the book moves from tranquil Hangzhou to war-torn Chongqing, from the temporary home of Kuomintang hopefuls in Taiwan to the permanent concession of the KMT's loss represented by the United States.
Ms. Chang's first full-length novel follows the fortunes of the Wang family through three generations and beyond, from old Chanyi to her daughters Junan and Yinan and then to their daughters Hong and Hwa and one son, Yao. While Hong provides the narrative voice (and the source of the existential question framed by the novel's title), her mother Junan is the novel's focal point, the eye of a family storm generated by her own choices as well as historical events beyond her control. The triangular relationship between Junan, her husband Li Ang, and her sister Yinan spawns unintended consequences that profoundly affect each other's lives and those around them.
Just as modern China is both the victim and inheritor of its own past, Ms. Chang's characters are the product of their respective pasts, inheriting character traits and the after-effects of embittered relationships from those who came before them. The author raises the question of who we are as individuals, and how much of our lives are directed by our inheritance from the lives and events of our parents and grandparents.
On one level, INHERITANCE can be read as a multi-generational family saga dominated by the force of will of one member. From this viewpoint, it is a story of parental and conjugal relationships, about broken trust and willingness to forgive.
Yet on another level, the book mirrors the story of China itself, with the major characters representing the different Chinas of the 20th Century. With her partially bound feet and superstitions, old Chanyi represents the last of imperial China. Junan, her oldest daughter, is the Republic, rigidly bound to tradition but striving for independence. Bookish Yinan represents the philosophical foundation of Communist China, the carefree militarist Li Ang represents Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomingtang, and Li Ang's brother Li Bing represents the spirit of revolution, the Communist Party in action. Daughter Hong, whose name translates conveniently as Red and who is the inheritor of this historical chaos, ultimately represents the internationalized China, integrated into the Western world in a way she could never have foreseen in her childhood.
Not surprisingly, these characters find it next to impossible to reconcile themselves to one another. Only the open and modernized Hong is truly able to accept and love her entire family, overlooking the shortcomings in each and aware of her own failings as well.
Ms. Chang creates a Russian novel's worth of intriguing minor characters who complement the major players admirably. Characters like Li Bing, Hu Mudan, Hu Ran, Wang Daming, Pu Taitai, Chen Da-Huan, and Hsiao Meiyu capture our interest in their own right, adding colorful flavor and contrast to the main characters. Her female characters are rich and fully developed, while her male characters feel moderately less so. Only the missionary Katherine Rodale and Hong's American husband, Tom, seem to fall flat, but perhaps this is Chang's commentary on the blandness of white American family life.
INHERITANCE offers an engaging story of a decidedly matriarchal family finding its way along the currents of history. Along the way, readers will absorb elements of Chinese life and culture, and a smattering of Mandarin vocabulary as well. This is a richly satisfying first novel that leaves me anxiously anticipating Ms. Chang's future works.