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The Cooked Seed
The Cooked Seed | Anchee Min
2 posts | 2 read | 8 to read
In 1994, Anchee Min published Red Azalea, a memoir of growing up during the violent trauma of the Cultural Revolution. It became an international bestseller. Twenty years later, Min returns to give us the next chapter, as she moves from the shocking deprivations of her homeland to the sudden bounty of the promised land of America, without language, money or a clear path. With the help of actress Joan Chen, Anchee applies to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She shows a portfolio of her self-taught brush paintings at the US consulate and is granted an entry visa, but once in America, Anchee finds she is on her own, forced to survive by her wits and indomitable spirit. She teaches herself English by watching Sesame Street, has five jobs at once sleeps in unheated rooms in desolate neighbourhoods. As well as her struggle to understand her new country – the food, the warm showers – Anchee suffers rape, collapses from exhaustion, marries poorly and divorces after giving birth to her daughter, Lauryann. Despite her tough, lonely journey, Anchee finds that it is Lauryann who will save her and root her, finally, in America. As a child, Anchee understood herself as a mere 'bolt on the great machine that was Communism'; in America she learns how to succeed in a radically different culture despite bitter hardships and countless setbacks. The Cooked Seed is an unforgettable story.
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Sisenegger
The Cooked Seed | Anchee Min
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I am glad that I read Anchee Min's autobiography first because now when I dive headfirst into her books, it will be with a respect for the author and the knowledge that she stayed true to the real stories of women in China's history. "The Cooked Seed" dealt with some tough stuff and I didn't always understand where she was coming from (especially with her daughter), but I doubt a more determined human has ever lived. #mmdchallenge #litsychallenge

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Sisenegger
The Cooked Seed | Anchee Min
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I'm becoming adept at sneaking in a few pages while keeping a two-year-old entertained. I'm finding "The Cooked Seed" to be a quite sad, but compelling story. Not only have I learned that I'm completely ignorant to the living conditions during the end of and after the Mao era in China, but I've also had to give myself some mental face slaps for whining about the small stuff when Anchee Min faced so many hardships without complaint.

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