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Tiger luck

by
July–August 2008, no. 303

Ching Chong China Girl: From fruit shop to foreign correspondent by Helene Chung

ABC Books, $32.95 pb, 358 pp

Tiger luck

by
July–August 2008, no. 303

When journalist Helene Chung grew up in Hobart in the 1960s, there were fewer than one hundred Chinese living there, and her complicated family seemed to include almost all of them. Her great-grandfather came to Australia for gold, but succumbed to opium. He was rescued by her grandfather, who worked in the Tasmanian tin mines, founding a small dynasty as brothers and cousins arrived with their multiple wives, and married more in Australia. It sounds like a familiar story, but as it unfolds the author’s intelligence and determination create an idiosyncratic portrait of what first- and second-generation migrants endure, and how they triumph.

Joan Grant reviews 'Ching Chong China Girl: From fruit shop to foreign correspondent' by Helene Chung

Ching Chong China Girl: From fruit shop to foreign correspondent

by Helene Chung

ABC Books, $32.95 pb, 358 pp

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