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Daughter of Fortune: A Novel (P.S.) by Isabel Allende
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Isabel Allende Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2006-05-02 ISBN: 0061120251 Number of pages: 432 Publisher: Harper Perennial
Book Reviews of Daughter of Fortune: A Novel (P.S.)Book Review: Treat Yourself Summary: 5 Stars
Daughter of Fortune probably ranks among top 3 books of Allende's. Reading it is like having a good meal - parts of it are truly delicious with unexpected flavor - just like the protagonist prides herself on cooking. Anyone who has read House of the Spirits will appreciate Allende's growth as a writer and her growing confidence as far as not hesitating to write spirited sexual encounters as well as truly mystical turn of events. Fortune is an appropriate word for the title as fate plays a large role in all of Allende's writings, but especially here. For those who found the abrupt ending jarring, you might be interested to know that Allende planned it that way. Reportedly, "Her mother, who, at the age of seventy-eight, remains her only editor, questioned the ending as being too abrupt. However, Allende states that she knew that her dream was telling her that the story had arrived at its own natural ending. Some reviews of the book call Daughter of Fortune one of Allende's best." "Daughter of Fortune: Introduction." Novels for Students. Ed. Marie Rose Napierkowski. Vol. 18. Detroit: Gale, 1998. eNotes. January 2006. 24 August 2009. Perhaps the best message of the book, however, is one of tolerance and the need for understanding between various cultures, as well as generations. This book is to be noted for showcasing the bigotry and outright hatred that people show to one another, but yet how a flower can bloom out of the dirt, as the relationship between the protagonist and the Chinese physician demonstrates (not to spoil anything more). There has rarely been a non-political book in the recent memory that placed so high an emphasis on cultural understanding, so clearly and emphatically. A must read.
Summary of Daughter of Fortune: A Novel (P.S.)An orphan raised in Valparaíso, Chile, by a Victorian spinster and her rigid brother, young, vivacious Eliza Sommers follows her lover to California during the Gold Rush of 1849. She enters a rough-and-tumble world whose newly arrived inhabitants are driven mad by gold fever. With the help of her good friend and savior, the Chinese doctor Tao Chi'en, Eliza moves freely in a society of single men and prostitutes, creating an unconventional but independent life for herself. The young Chilean's search for her elusive lover gradually turns into another kind of journey, and by the time she finally hears news of him, Eliza must decide who her true love really is. Oprah Book Club® Selection, February 2000: Until Isabel Allende burst onto the scene with her 1985 debut, The House of the Spirits, Latin American fiction was, for the most part, a boys' club comprising such heavy hitters as Gabriel García Márquez, Jorge Luis Borges, and Mario Vargas Llosa. But the Chilean Allende shouldered her way in with her magical realist multi-generational tale of the Trueba family, followed it up with four more novels and a spate of nonfiction, and has remained in a place of honor ever since. Her sixth work of fiction, Daughter of Fortune, shares some characteristics with her earlier works: the canvas is wide, the characters are multi-generational and multi-ethnic, and the protagonist is an unconventional woman who overcomes enormous obstacles to make her way in the world. Yet one cannot accuse Allende of telling the same story twice; set in the mid-1800s, this novel follows the fortunes of Eliza Sommers, Chilean by birth but adopted by a British spinster, Rose Sommers, and her bachelor brother, Jeremy, after she is abandoned on their doorstep. "You have English blood, like us," Miss Rose assured Eliza when she was old enough to understand. "Only someone from the British colony would have thought to leave you in a basket on the doorstep of the British Import and Export Company, Limited. I am sure they knew how good-hearted my brother Jeremy is, and felt sure he would take you in. In those days I was longing to have a child, and you fell into my arms, sent by God to be brought up in the solid principles of the Protestant faith and the English language." The family servant, Mama Fresia, has a different point of view, however: "You, English? Don't get any ideas, child. You have Indian hair, like mine." And certainly Eliza's almost mystical ability to recall all the events of her life would seem to stem more from the Indian than the Protestant side. As Eliza grows up, she becomes less tractable, and when she falls in love with Joachin Andieta, a clerk in Jeremy's firm, her adoptive family is horrified. They are even more so when a now-pregnant Eliza follows her lover to California where he has gone to make his fortune in the 1849 gold rush. Along the way Eliza meets Tao Chi'en, a Chinese doctor who saves her life and becomes her closest friend. What starts out as a search for a lost love becomes, over time, the discovery of self; and by the time Eliza finally catches up with the elusive Joachin, she is no longer sure she still wants what she once wished for. Allende peoples her novel with a host of colorful secondary characters. She even takes the narrative as far afield as China, providing an intimate portrait of Tao Chi'en's past before returning to 19th-century San Francisco, where he and Eliza eventually fetch up. Readers with a taste for the epic, the picaresque, and romance that is satisfyingly complex will find them all in Daughter of Fortune. --Margaret Prior
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