Prologue: Departure
Part I: Moving House
Chapter 1: Origins
Chapter 2: Ambition
Chapter 3: Disappointment
Chapter 4: Courtyards
Chapter 5: Mountains and Walls
Part II: Casting Off
Chapter 6: Lessons
Chapter 7: Mist
Chapter 8: Amid Ghosts
Chapter 9: In the Streets
Chapter 10: Romance
Chapter 11: Gatherings
Chapter 12: Modern Medicine
Chapter 13: Crescent Moon
Part III: Seeking a Mooring
Chapter 14: Arrival
Chapter 15: Adrift
Chapter 16: Souvenirs
Chapter 17: The Entangling Net
Chapter 18: Rice Porridge
Chapter 19: War Letters
Chapter 20: An American Home
Chapter 21: Wandering
Chapter 22: The Chinese House
Epilogue: Return
Sasha Su-Ling Welland has woven together the remarkable lives of her grandmother and great-aunt in this biography. She is assistant professor of anthropology and women studies at the University of Washington.
Filled with fascinating glimpses of twentieth-century Chinese
women's intellectual history and insights into the Chinese-American
and Anglo-Chinese experience.
*Publishers Weekly*
Welland is an anthropologist with a novelist’s eye for the art of
both making lives and making books. She weaves biography, memoir,
genealogy, social history, literary criticism, and theoretical
reflection coherently, accessibly, and, indeed, beautifully.
*Booklist, Starred Review*
Welland wisely refrains from intruding on the narration, allowing
her fascinating topic to speak for itself. Scholarly and 'serious'
in its depth and breadth of research, Welland's book is also highly
readable and full of rich detail. . . . This is a book that
enlightens as much as it delights and remains with you long after
the reading.
*The Seattle Times*
Welland skillfully navigates the murky waters of memory,
exaggeration, cultural misunderstanding and transformed identity,
with both a scholar's critical eye and a granddaughter's desire to
believe.
*Honolulu Advertiser*
Fascinating . . . Sasha Welland has produced a wonderful book from
the lives of these two strong sisters.
*Times Literary Supplement*
An intriguing and memorable study. . . . We have been told the
lives of two powerful and interesting women . . . both determined
to surmount as best they could the restrictions placed on women’s
lives.
*Virginia Woolf Miscellany*
Biographies are said to narrate the life of an individual. In this
multi-layered work, Sasha Su-Ling Welland accomplishes much more,
as she relates a complex story of re-creations, self-discovery, and
selective memories. . . . [A] well-written and valuable work,
especially for the many interesting points that it makes on the
intricacies of cultural encounters, usages of the past, and
exoticism.
*H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online*
Welland's forebears could fairly be called trailblazing, and . . .
she deftly shows how their lives mingled with history.
*The Instrumentalist*
The author of A Thousand Miles of Dreams intersperses the accounts
of the two sisters’ lives in alternate chapters, thus providing a
fascinating comparison of experiences in these distant countries
and contrasting cultures as the Second World War loomed.
*Asian Affairs*
Remarkable. . . . A coming-of-age account of the Ling sisters,
Welland’s book . . . reveal[s] new insights about the role of
Chinese women as it changed not only in China but also the West. .
. . A well-crafted and lively book that is sure to capture the
imagination of lay readers and scholars alike.
*International Examiner*
With elegant writing and a delicate anthropological touch, Sasha
Su-Ling Welland offers . . . an intriguing biography of two Chinese
sisters. . . . Overall, while a fine biography, this book is also
an informative and engaging work in the literary genre of
ethnography, enhancing our understanding of women, education, and
intellectual history in modern China, as well as exploring the
experiences of Chinese immigrants in the United States and
Europe.
*American Anthropologist*
Sasha Welland's deft and gripping biography of her grandmother and
great-aunt is elegiac but never sentimental. It is compelling,
lucid, historically nuanced, and an absorbing read.
*Gail Hershatter, University of California, Santa Cruz*
Sasha Su-Ling Welland is Heartland-born with deep China roots. In A
Thousand Miles of Dreams, she reaches back through family documents
and her own scholarly reading of the historical record to create a
portrait of a family's personal journey that is moving, passionate,
and fully accessible.
*Clark Blaise, author of I Had a Father, Time Lord, and others;
former director of the International Writers Program, University of
Iowa*
This is a wonderfully written account of two Chinese modern girls
whose lives traversed the entire twentieth century from China to
England and the United States. Their artistic and professional
accomplishments through decades of war and exile may be legendary,
but their personal lives were also filled with many human
frailties. Intermixed with Welland's reminiscences of growing up in
the United States as a Eurasian whose mother was partly raised by
an African American housekeeper, the tales of these women weave an
intricate tapestry of literary pursuit, transnational migration, an
interracial affair, and middle-class domesticity. The author wields
the pen of a historian, an ethnographer, and a poet, but ultimately
it is the writer as a granddaughter and a grandniece that gives the
story its most intimate human touch.
*Shu-mei Shih, University of California, Los Angeles; author of The
Lure of the Modern*
With magnificently fluid erudition and a compassionately wry eye,
Sasha Su-Ling Welland forges the story of two remarkable women
whose lives expand our knowledge of twentieth-century feminism in
China, the U.S., and Britain. Weaving her own autobiographical
accounts into the mix, Welland deftly depicts how the absurdities
of racial and sexual constructs persist over time and place, while
arguing for the resolute power of following one's heart.
*Anna Maria Hong, editor of Growing Up Asian American: An
Anthology*
Filled with fascinating glimpses of twentieth-century Chinese
women's intellectual history and insights into the Chinese-American
and Anglo-Chinese experience. * Publishers Weekly *
Welland is an anthropologist with a novelist's eye for the art of
both making lives and making books. She weaves biography, memoir,
genealogy, social history, literary criticism, and theoretical
reflection coherently, accessibly, and, indeed, beautifully. *
Booklist, Starred Review *
Welland wisely refrains from intruding on the narration, allowing
her fascinating topic to speak for itself. Scholarly and 'serious'
in its depth and breadth of research, Welland's book is also highly
readable and full of rich detail. . . . This is a book that
enlightens as much as it delights and remains with you long after
the reading. * The Seattle Times *
Welland skillfully navigates the murky waters of memory,
exaggeration, cultural misunderstanding and transformed identity,
with both a scholar's critical eye and a granddaughter's desire to
believe. * Honolulu Advertiser *
Fascinating . . . Sasha Welland has produced a wonderful book from
the lives of these two strong sisters. * Times Literary Supplement
*
An intriguing and memorable study. . . . We have been told the
lives of two powerful and interesting women . . . both determined
to surmount as best they could the restrictions placed on women's
lives. -- Peter Stansky * Virginia Woolf Miscellany *
Biographies are said to narrate the life of an individual. In this
multi-layered work, Sasha Su-Ling Welland accomplishes much more,
as she relates a complex story of re-creations, self-discovery, and
selective memories. . . . [A] well-written and valuable work,
especially for the many interesting points that it makes on the
intricacies of cultural encounters, usages of the past, and
exoticism. -- Valentina Boretti, University of London * H-Net:
Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online *
Welland's forebears could fairly be called trailblazing, and . . .
she deftly shows how their lives mingled with history. * The
Instrumentalist *
The author of A Thousand Miles of Dreams intersperses the accounts
of the two sisters' lives in alternate chapters, thus providing a
fascinating comparison of experiences in these distant countries
and contrasting cultures as the Second World War loomed. -- Michael
Sheringham * Asian Affairs *
Remarkable. . . . A coming-of-age account of the Ling sisters,
Welland's book . . . reveal[s] new insights about the role of
Chinese women as it changed not only in China but also the West. .
. . A well-crafted and lively book that is sure to capture the
imagination of lay readers and scholars alike. * International
Examiner *
With elegant writing and a delicate anthropological touch, Sasha
Su-Ling Welland offers . . . an intriguing biography of two Chinese
sisters. . . . Overall, while a fine biography, this book is also
an informative and engaging work in the literary genre of
ethnography, enhancing our understanding of women, education, and
intellectual history in modern China, as well as exploring the
experiences of Chinese immigrants in the United States and Europe.
* American Anthropologist *
Sasha Welland's deft and gripping biography of her grandmother and
great-aunt is elegiac but never sentimental. It is compelling,
lucid, historically nuanced, and an absorbing read. -- Gail
Hershatter, University of California, Santa Cruz
Sasha Su-Ling Welland is Heartland-born with deep China roots. In A
Thousand Miles of Dreams, she reaches back through family documents
and her own scholarly reading of the historical record to create a
portrait of a family's personal journey that is moving, passionate,
and fully accessible. -- Clark Blaise, author of I Had a Father,
Time Lord, and others; former director of the International Writers
Program, University of Iowa
This is a wonderfully written account of two Chinese modern girls
whose lives traversed the entire twentieth century from China to
England and the United States. Their artistic and professional
accomplishments through decades of war and exile may be legendary,
but their personal lives were also filled with many human
frailties. Intermixed with Welland's reminiscences of growing up in
the United States as a Eurasian whose mother was partly raised by
an African American housekeeper, the tales of these women weave an
intricate tapestry of literary pursuit, transnational migration, an
interracial affair, and middle-class domesticity. The author wields
the pen of a historian, an ethnographer, and a poet, but ultimately
it is the writer as a granddaughter and a grandniece that gives the
story its most intimate human touch. -- Shu-mei Shih, University of
California, Los Angeles; author of The Lure of the Modern
With magnificently fluid erudition and a compassionately wry eye,
Sasha Su-Ling Welland forges the story of two remarkable women
whose lives expand our knowledge of twentieth-century feminism in
China, the U.S., and Britain. Weaving her own autobiographical
accounts into the mix, Welland deftly depicts how the absurdities
of racial and sexual constructs persist over time and place, while
arguing for the resolute power of following one's heart. -- Anna
Maria Hong, editor of Growing Up Asian American: An Anthology
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