cover image: The Long March Home

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The Long March Home

2011

The Long Road Home is the story of three generations of women, beginning with a grandmother who as a young woman went to China as a Canadian missionary nurse and fell in love with a Chinese medical student acting as her interpreter. Shortly after anti-western sentiment sends her home to Nova Scotia, she discovers she is pregnant. Attempts by her, and later their daughter, to contact him fail. Her daughter, Meihua, goes to China to look for her father and winds up marrying a Chinese man and teaching art. The cultural revolution sees her sent to prison as a American spy and anti-revolutionary, and her husband confined to a gulag. Their children, still at home, are raised by the family\'s illiterate servant, Yao. Yao\'s crude manner and resourcefulness partly shield Yezi, Meihua\'s daughter, and the novel\'s main character, as well as her brother, from family tragedy, poverty and political discrimination, negotiating their survival during the revolution that she barely understands. Only after her mother is released, does Yezi learns about her foreign grandmother, Agnes, who now lives in Boston and has lost contact with the family since Yezi\'s birth. Curious about her American ancestry, Yezi decides to join her grandmother in the U.S. Reading her grandmother\'s diaries helps Yezi get to know her grandmother as a young Canadian missionary and her life in China with the man who is her grandfather, and who her mother still longs to find.--pub. desc.

Authors

Zoë S. Roy

ISBN
9781771330039 1771330031
Published in
Toronto, CA