#BlogTour #BookReview Peach Blossom Spring by Melissa Fu @RandomTTours

Peach Blossom Spring BT PosterWelcome to today’s stop on the blog your for Peach Blossom Spring by Melissa Fu. My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Headline for my digital review copy via NetGalley. Do check out the posts by my tour buddies for today, bookstagrammers Daisy at DaisReads and Seher at The Girl Who Reads.


Peach Blossom SpringAbout the Book

With every misfortune there is a blessing and within every blessing, the seeds of misfortune, and so it goes, until the end of time.

It is 1938 in China and, as a young wife, Meilin’s future is bright. But with the Japanese army approaching, Meilin and her four year old son, Renshu, are forced to flee their home. Relying on little but their wits and a beautifully illustrated hand scroll, filled with ancient fables that offer solace and wisdom, they must travel through a ravaged country, seeking refuge.

Years later, Renshu has settled in America as Henry Dao. Though his daughter is desperate to understand her heritage, he refuses to talk about his childhood. How can he keep his family safe in this new land when the weight of his history threatens to drag them down? Yet how can Lily learn who she is if she can never know her family’s story?

Spanning continents and generations, Peach Blossom Spring is a bold and moving look at the history of modern China, told through the story of one family. It’s about the power of our past, the hope for a better future, and the haunting question: What would it mean to finally be home?

Format: Hardcover (400 pages)        Publisher: Wildfire
Publication date: 17th March 2022  Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Peach Blossom Spring on Goodreads

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My Review

Peach Blossom Spring follows three generations of a Chinese family through six decades of social, geographical and cultural change. It focuses on two members of the Dao family – Meilin, wife of the younger son who fears she may now be a widow, and her son, Renshu.

Opening in 1938, Meilin and Renshu, along with Meilin’s brother-in-law and his family, are forced to flee their home in Changsa following the Japanese invasion of China. It’s the first in a long and dangerous journey that sees them move from place to place in search of safety. The scenes of panic as families attempt to escape bombing raids, take cover in crowded shelters and make long journeys, often on foot with only the possessions they can carry, are described in a way that really brings to life the horror and desperation. It is impossible to read some of the scenes without it bringing to mind the current situation in Ukraine. Throughout it all, Meilin’s one objective is to protect her son and to try to shield him from the full horror of what is going on around him. One way she does this is by telling him traditional Chinese stories using the beautiful illustrated scroll which is her most treasured possession.  As well as a distraction, these stories constitute life lessons and offer ways of looking at the challenges one may face.

Meilin is a wonderful character who demonstrates fortitude and a determination to survive despite all the obstacles placed in her way. At some points, she is forced to make impossible choices and place herself in vulnerable situations, always prioritising the needs of her son over her own. Eventually she finds the means to get them to relative safety in Taiwan where she does everything she can to ensure a secure future for Renshu.  Meilin’s story was the most powerful and engaging part of the book for me and I was rather sorry when the focus moved from her to Renshu.

Having said that, Renshu’s experiences when he travels to the United States to study is a fascinating exploration of what it is like to leave one culture for another and of the immigrant experience. He makes a deliberate decision to shed his former identity and create a new one – Dao Renshu becomes Henry Dao – and also to consign his past to the mental equivalent of a locked box, consciously splitting his life into ‘Renshu’s world’ and ‘Henry’s world’.  Moreover, Henry fears any association with the politics of China might threaten his US citizenship or have consequences for his family in Taiwan.

In the final section of the book, the focus moves to Henry’s daughter, Lily. She longs to know more about her Chinese heritage, feeling as if she’s incomplete without this. ‘Sometimes, Lily feels that there’s something she’s supposed to know that she doesn’t, or something she’s supposed to be that she isn’t.’ There’s a touching scene in which she and her classmates are asked to construct their family trees and Lily feels ashamed that one side of her tree is blank. Lily cannot understand her father’s reluctance to allow her to learn Chinese – which she longs to do – not least so she can converse with her grandmother. She’s also perturbed by her father’s reticence about the years before he came to America.  What she doesn’t know is that Henry fears he has nothing to offer Lily in the way of heritage. ‘What tradition could he pass down? A broken country? Suspicion and betrayal? Miles and miles of misery?’

When Henry finally unburdens himself to Lily, she writes down everything he tells her in much the same way as the author recalls writing down her own father’s experiences when he finally chose to share them with her, memories he had kept hidden for a long, long time. For Lily, learning about her father’s past finally fills in those gaps in her family history, allowing her to embrace both sides of her cultural identity.

In her note to readers the author explains that although the Dao family are an imagined family their experiences reflect the actual experiences of families who lived through the Sino-Japanese and Chinese Civil wars.  As she notes, ‘Here is one of the great gifts of fiction: from many threads of human experience, we can weave a tapestry of narrative.’ In Peach Blossom Spring, the author has certainly woven an enthralling tapestry that provides an insight into China’s rich culture and takes the reader on an emotional journey through a turbulent period of Chinese history, one sadly reminiscent of the times we are living through.

In three words: Sweeping, dramatic, moving

Try something similar: The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck

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Melissa Fu Author PicAbout the Author

Melissa Fu grew up in Northern New Mexico and now lives near Cambridge, UK, with her husband and children. With academic backgrounds in physics and English, she has worked in education as a teacher, curriculum developer, and consultant.

Melissa was the regional winner of the Words and Women 2016 Prose Competition and was a 2017 Apprentice with the London-based Word Factory. Her work appears in several publications including The Lonely Crowd, International Literature Showcase, Bare Fiction, Wasafiri Online, and The Willowherb Review. In 2019, her debut poetry pamphlet, Falling Outside Eden, was published by the Hedgehog Poetry Press. In 2018/2019, Melissa received an Arts Council England, Developing Your Creative Practice grant and was the David TK Wong Fellow at the University of East Anglia. Peach Blossom Spring is her first novel.

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#BookReview A Sunlit Weapon by Jacqueline Winspear @AllisonandBusby

A Sunlit WeaponAbout the Book

October 1942. Jo Hardy, an Air Transport Auxilliary ferry pilot, is delivering a Spitfire to Biggin Hill Aerodrome, when she has the terrifying experience of coming under fire from the ground. In a bid to find out who was trying to take down her aircraft, she returns on foot to the area, and discovers an African American soldier bound and gagged in an old barn. A few days later another ferry pilot crashes and is killed in the same area of Kent.

Although the death has been attributed to ‘pilot error’ Jo believes there is a connection between all three events – and she wants desperately to help the soldier, who is now in the custody of American military police. Jo is advised to take her suspicions to Maisie Dobbs.

As the psychologist-investigator delves into the case, she discovers the attempt to take down ferry pilots and the plight of the black American soldier are inextricably linked with the visit to Britain by the First Lady of the United States, Eleanor Roosevelt. Maisie must work with speed to uncover the depth of connection, to save the life of the President’s wife and a soldier caught in the crosshairs of those who would see them both dead.

Format: Hardback (320 pages)         Publisher: Allison & Busby
Publication date: 22nd March 2022 Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime, Mystery

Find A Sunlit Weapon on Goodreads

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Disclosure: If you buy a book via the above link, I may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookshops

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My Review

A Sunlit Weapon is the seventeenth book in Jacqueline Winspear’s historical crime series featuring psychologist/private investigator Maisie Dobbs. I only discovered the series with the publication of The American Agent (book fifteen) but reading that, and the book that followed it, The Consequences of Fear, was enough to make me a firm fan.

For those new to the series, I believe A Sunlit Weapon can easily be enjoyed as a standalone. And,  although there are references to events in previous books, I don’t think that would preclude going back to read earlier books in the series (as I hope to do one day) in order to learn more about Maisie’s past. However, at this point we find her married to former US Department of Justice agent, Mark Scott, and dividing her time between her London office and the family home in Kent where she lives with her adopted daughter, Anna, her father and stepmother.

Fans of the series will be familiar with Maisie’s methodical approach to investigating the cases that come her way, often recalling the advice of her former mentor, Maurice Blanche, and carefully constructing her elaborate case maps. She possesses a keen eye for detail, has perfected the art of getting information through seemingly casual conversations, is not averse to telling a few white lies to elicit facts and is no stranger to intrepid exploration. Her background as a psychologist gives her an instinct for whether someone is telling the truth and often points her in the direction of a motive that might not be obvious to others.

Her current case sees Maisie searching for a connection between a series of rather disparate events. As she delves further, the picture becomes increasingly complex with new avenues of enquiry opening up all the time. Whenever faced with an obstacle, what motivates Maisie is a sense of responsibility towards her client and her innate sense of justice.

The war is a constant backdrop to events in which few families have been left unaffected whether that’s because of loved ones injured or killed, forced relocation or just the sheer mental strain of not knowing what tomorrow will bring. Will today be the day that dreaded telephone call or telegram arrives? As Maisie observes, ‘We’re all told we can take it, but I’m not sure we can’, wondering if in fact people have become used to death, used to absorbing the shock of loss.

One particularly interesting element of the book for me was the focus on women’s contribution to the war effort, whether as Air Transport Auxilliary ferry pilots or members of the Land Army.  As Maisie discovers not everyone approves of women taking up these roles, believing that it is not ‘women’s work’. Prejudice of another kind also runs through the book, some very close to home for Maisie, and other more institutional in nature.

As you’d expect, Maisie – with the help of her trusty assistant Billy and some string-pulling by her husband – is eventually able to put together the pieces of what turns out to be a very complicated picture. What she discovers is a chain of events which is the product of ‘manipulated minds’. Throw in some dramatic scenes, a portion of woolton pie and lashings of tea and you have another very entertaining addition to the series.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of Allison & Busby via NetGalley.

In three words: Entertaining, clever, fast-moving

Try something similar: Betty Church and the Suffolk Vampire by M.R.C. Kasasian

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Jacqueline WinspearAbout the Author

Jacqueline Winspear is the author of the New York Times bestsellers The Consequences of Fear, The American Agent and To Die But Once, as well as thirteen other bestselling Maisie Dobbs novels and The Care and Management of Lies, a Dayton Literary Peace Prize finalist. Jacqueline has also published two nonfiction books, What Would Maisie Do?, and a memoir, This Time Next Year We’ll Be Laughing. Originally from the United States, she divides her time between California and the Pacific Northwest.

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