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Monkey Hunting (2004)

Monkey Hunting (2004)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.6 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0345466101 (ISBN13: 9780345466105)
Language
English
Publisher
ballantine books

About book Monkey Hunting (2004)

Once in awhile I try to learn something new so I picked up this audiobook from my library because it sounded interesting and was based on something I knew nothing about, the migration of Chinese to Cuba in the 1900’s. It starts out with the story of Chen Pan who decides to leave his family and his wife to make a better life for them all. The book then goes on to describe how he and his fellow passengers were misled and now destined for a future as slaves working on a sugarcane plantation. Strangely, as the story revealed misery upon misery I found myself a bit detached. This guy isn’t terribly likable even if his story is intriguing. Apparently, because he never really loved his wife it is okay when he pays for sex and then decides never returns to the unloved wife or those who raised him and who may be worried. Though he suffers at the hands of the slave holders he doesn’t seem to feel any guilt or remorse at his lack of morals for the things he does. This bugged me and it was hard to empathize with him since he was the catalyst for his own fate. He ends up succeeding through persistence and hard work and buys himself a slave of his own to love. I am swooning with the romance of it all. This book so far is missing the mark because I feel annoyed instead of emotionally involved. The book then jumps forward rather abruptly to another relation living in New York and I’m left a little confused. I don’t know if I’ll finish this book if I continue to remain disconnected from the characters. Later: After reading several reviews I realize others had a similar experience and that the book does indeed continue in this way, skimming over the emotional impact of the events, so I’m going to chuck it and start something else. Life's too short to struggle with books that aren't for me.

I liked the writing, and I liked the story, mostly. What I didn't like was that it felt as if I were reading bits and pieces of three or four shorter stories that while connected, were thrown together. The author jumped back and forth between time, places, and family members. Just about the time I was being drawn into a particular story line, I'd have to switch gears and be reacquainted with a different member of the family in a different part of the world at a different point in history. I would have rather read three or four stories about each of the family members with their individual stories fleshed out. At the end, if felt as if only one story, was truly completed. Two of the others finished well enough, but could have continued, and the fourth simply was never fleshed out enough to care about.

Do You like book Monkey Hunting (2004)?

I loved listening to this book. I'd never even heard about the Chinese in Cuba, so that part was especially fascinating. The book was in my car, and it actually made me look forward to my commute!That said, and even though I would recommend this book on the whole as both interesting and entertaining, I would not claim that it is great, great literature.Some of Garcia's character descriptions seem just right, and some seem forced. (This applies to various characters at various times in their lives.) I can forgive a few nonsensical platitudes in a book this short and otherwise entertaining and thought provoking.
—Debbie

You know how I had mentioned in my post on Wayson Choy’s Jade Peony that I am apprehensive about reading Chinese immigrant stories? So why was it that immediately after reading Jade Peony, I picked up Cristina Garcia’s Monkey Hunting? I’m not sure myself. But from Vancouver’s Chinatown, I found myself in Cuba, following Chen Pan who in 1857 travels from China to be enslaved (unsuspectingly so) on a sugarcane plantation. He somehow makes it out of the plantation, becomes his own boss (he sells secondhand goods) and buys a mulatto woman out of slavery.Of course, immigrant stories are never told just by that one generation alone, so Garcia throws us over to New York in 1968 where we meet Domingo, Chen Pan’s great-grandson, and also to Shanghai in the 1920s where Chen Fang, Chen Pan’s granddaughter beats the odds and finds work as an educator. These sudden shifts in location, time and character can be a bit jarring, especially when I was more interested in the goings-on in Cuba (I never thought I’d read a story about Chinese immigrants in Cuba, for one thing) and the way these other sections felt more like anecdotes and left many questions, and just felt somewhat incomplete. Perhaps a more sweeping story, allowing for a greater focus on the lives on Chen Pan’s descendants would have been better?Today, writing this, a week after reading this book (and having gone on to several others since), Chen Pan’s story still sticks in my mind but those of his descendants, not so much. Garcia’s book offers up a unique setting for the immigrant story, and a rather engaging start, but in the end, it was a little forgettable and a bit confusing.
—Sharlene

I bought this book two years ago because I thought it would tell me about Cuba, a country which, for me, is shrouded in mystery. I did learn a bit of Cuba's history, but from the side of the Chinese immigrants who were enslaved in the sugar cane fields in the 19th century. Chen Pan was in his early 20s when he was paid 5 pesos to go to Cuba to work for 8 years. He expected to return to China a wealthy man, but instead was enslaved. Sometime later he escapes from the cane fields and for a year makes his way through the jungle to Havana. Once there he works menial jobs, saving his money, until he can purchase a shop and begin an antiques business. Later he buys a negro slave woman, Lucrezia, and her son to work in the shop. Chen Pan treats her with kindness and she eventually falls in love with him. Through their children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren the story of the family unfolds, traveling from Cuba, back to China, to New York, Saigon, Shanghai, and back to Cuba again. All the characters were interesting, but none more so than Chen Pan, who assimilates and feels more Cuban than Chinese.
—Maggie

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