Thursday, October 24, 2019

Where the Past Begins: A Writer's Memoir - Amy Tan

I came to Amy Tan’s novels very late in her career despite having been aware of her almost from the moment that The Joy Luck Club hit the bookstores back in 1989. Even saying that “I came” to her novels is a bit misleading as, to this day, that’s the only one of her novels I’ve read – and I didn’t finally read that one until 2015. But still, Amy Tan fascinates me enough that I recently purchased a copy of her 2017 “writer’s memoir” Where the Past Begins in hardcopy and borrowed the audiobook version from the library in order to hear Tan read her own work. Let’s just say that I was not disappointed and that Tan continues to fascinate me.

Where the Past Begins: A Writer’s Memoir intimately explores the author’s family history, especially that of her mother. Those familiar with Tan’s novels will already be familiar with the basics of her family tree and how the family ended up in America; even those like me who have read only The Joy Luck Club will immediately recognize several of Tan’s relatives and episodes from their lives. But what they will be reading for the first time is how it really was for Tan to grow up with a mother who often used the threat of suicide to get her husband and children to do what she wanted them to do. Perhaps the most surprising thing about Where the Past Begins, however, is that Tan even decided to share the cathartic process of writing it with her readers, in the first place.  

It all started for Tan when she decided to explore the contents of the seven plastic bins she kept in her office, bins containing photographs, letters, and miscellaneous memorabilia marking some of the “frozen moments in time” relating to her own past and to her family history (moments from before her own birth). During the process, she learned just how unreliable many of her childhood memories were, and she was forced to reconfigure and reassess the ones she had of her parents. Tan learned who her parents really were. 

Amy Tan
The author pulls no punches here. This is as honest a memoir as one could wish for, one in which its author reveals much about her mentally unstable mother (including one incident in which her mother came at her with a knife) and how the relationship shaped her into the writer she would became. Tan also shares frank details about her father and her two brothers and her relationship with each of them. Not awfully surprising, I suppose, she learns that her surviving brother’s memories of their childhood do not always mesh in detail or in content with those of her own. Amy Tan is figuring out here who she is and how she became that person – and she takes her readers along for the ride.

Equally intriguing and honest are the book’s segments on the writing process and how Tan works her way through it to produce her fiction. Tan is not one of those overconfident writers who can speed through the writing process with the full confidence that she will almost certainly produce something worth publishing. For her, almost the opposite seems to be the case, and it is an educational joy to read through the long email exchange she shares here between her and her trusted editor. 

Bottom Line: Where the Past Begins will interest both Amy Tan admirers and general fans of the memoir genre who know relatively little about the author herself. The audiobook version of the memoir is read by the Tan (at a slow pace that can at times become a bit annoying), something else that will appeal to her already-fans. The drawback to reading this one via audiobook, however, is not being able to study the numerous family photos and documents that are available in the printed version (additions I only learned of because I have a hardcopy of the book). But whichever way you decide to experience Where the Past Begins, it is an interesting look into the life of one of this America’s most respected authors.

8 comments:

  1. My sister really loves Tan's books. Maybe I should buy this memoir for her for Christmas. Then I could read it, too. ;D

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    1. This would definitely be the time to look for a nice hardcopy of it because I've seen it on the remainders table at Barnes & Noble several times.

      As memoirs go, this one has it all, especially what I consider the most important element of a good memoir: complete transparency.

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  2. Another author I haven't read! I do read occasional memoirs though, usually actors or celebrities... who can be very self-obsessed. Policitians are more interesting, oddly. Have not read as many writer's memoirs.

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    1. I've read lots of writer's memoirs because I'm curious about their individual writing process and what their lives were like before they found fame. This one is not as much about the writing as it is about the stressful childhood Tan and her brothers endured. Her mother was unstable from the beginning and that never got any better over the course of the woman's long life. I was reminded too, of how much of her personal life she has used as the basis of her novels, starting with The Joy Luck Club.

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  3. I read The Joy Luck Club years ago! I imagine Tan's memoir would be unusually interesting. Childhood memories are often unreliable; comparing memories with parents or siblings can be enlightening.

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    1. I was talking about unreliable childhood memories just the morning with a bunch of friends over coffee. Some were reluctant to admit to that possibility, but eventually we all agreed that our memories don't necessarily don't match reality.

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  4. I've enjoyed a couple of Amy Tan's novels. Her memoir sounds super fascinating. I'd definitely be up for reading it. I'm always intrigued by authors' backgrounds, how their past affects their present, their writing processes, etc.

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    1. Her childhood was definitely an unusual one. Her mother had a difficult life in China before coming to America, and the scars from that caused her to be significantly unstable. Tan carries her own emotional scars as a result and she discusses it all very frankly in this memoir.

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