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Eighth Moon

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Sansan was four when the Communists took Tientsin. She was seventeen when she left China in 1962. This is her story of the years between: how she lived, what she hated, whom she loved; a sturdy, stubborn girl's true record of an existence none of her readers has ever known.

225 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1964

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About the author

Bette Bao Lord

16 books54 followers
Bette Bao Lord is a Chinese American writer and civic activist for human rights and democracy.

With her mother and father, Dora and Sandys Bao, she came to the United States at the age of eight when her father, a British-trained engineer, was sent there in 1946 by the Chinese government to purchase equipment. In 1949 Bette Bao Lord and her family were stranded in the United States when Mao Zedong and his communist rebels won the civil war in China. Bette Bao Lord has written eloquently about her childhood experiences as a Chinese immigrant in the post-World War II United States in her autobiographical children's book In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson. In this book she describes her efforts to learn English and to become accepted by her classmates and how she succeeds with the help of baseball and Jackie Robinson.

Bette Bao Lord is a distinguished international best-selling novelist and writer, and served as chair of the Board of Trustees of Freedom House.
Her second novel, Spring Moon (1981), set in pre-revolutionary China, was an international bestseller and American Book Award nominee for best first novel. The Middle Heart (1996) spans 70 years of modern Chinese history, ending in 1989 with the student-led demonstrations at Tiananmen Square. Her children's book, In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson, has become a classic used in schools nationwide. Her true stories of Chinese people, Legacies: A Chinese Mosaic, was also a bestseller and chosen by Time Magazine as one of the five best non-fiction works of the year. Ms. Lord's works have received numerous awards and been translated into 15-20 languages.

In addition to chairing Freedom House, Ms. Lord has served on many other boards including the Newseum, The Freedom Forum, the International Broadcasting Board of Governors, the Council on Foreign Relations and WNET.
Bette Bao Lord received an MA from Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and her BA from Tufts University. She married Winston Lord, later an Ambassador to China, in 1963, and they have a daughter, Elizabeth Pillsbury, and son, Winston Bao.

Bette Bao Lord is a recipient of seven honorary degrees (including Notre Dame, Tufts, and Pepperdine) and many awards as author, democracy advocate and outstanding immigrant. These include the USIA Award for Outstanding Contributions. President Clinton in 1998 presented her the first Eleanor Roosevelt Award for Human Rights and hailed her as "someone who writes so powerfully about the past and is working so effectively to shape the future."

(Source: Wikipedia)

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Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
11 reviews3 followers
November 29, 2017
This book is about my grandma's little sister. It is interesting to hear about a young girls life in communist China but even more interesting to know that this is about someone you know. I know so much more about her history and think that I can connect with her even more than now. I can sort of see why her personality is the way that it is. She comes from two different backgrounds just like when Mr.Errico came from all of his different backgrounds and I can definitely see how those two backgrounds could change her in different ways.
Profile Image for ♪ Kim N.
452 reviews100 followers
August 23, 2015
The "Sansan" of the book is Bette Bao Lord's sister, youngest of three children. When their father left China in 1946 to take a position in the US, he had to leave his family behind. Eventually, their mother was able to join him and brought the two older daughters with her. Sansan, who was barely a year old, was left with an aunt. The family thought the separation would be for a year or two at the most. But after the revolution and the establishment of the People’s Republic of China, it was impossible for them to return or for Sansan to leave the country. The family was not reunited until 16 years later.

The story was simple and touching. It’s not anything I hadn’t read before about life in China under Mao Zedong, but I was reminded again of what happens when ideology becomes more important than individual lives and how precious personal liberty is.
Profile Image for Ebookwormy1.
1,830 reviews364 followers
January 8, 2021
After enjoying other titles by Bette Bao Lord, I pulled The Eighth Moon out expecting fiction. However, a couple of chapters in, I had to regroup. I read the back of the book and did some searching online. It was then that I realized this is a non-fiction account of the life of her younger sister, who was trapped in China by political events and somewhat miraculously reunited with her family in the early 1960s.

Sansan’s story is all too familiar, though it is colored with personal details. School, countryside labor, poverty, family dysfunction, self and peer criticism sessions, walking the political tightrope, misinformation, mental/ physical illness, and trying to determine whether or not to believe the family reaching to pull her away from all she’s ever known, Sansan has a lot to navigate in her first 16 years stuck in China with her mother’s family. What is unfamiliar is the incredible way that her escape comes together to reunite her with her family in the United States and the publication of her story.

Assembled through interviews of Sansan (her sister’s nickname) by Bette herself, this is probably one of the first personal accounts ever published in the West about life in China during the communist period. It is a story China has resisted being told. Rescued in 1962 at the age of 16, Sansan’s story covers the disaster of the Great Leap forward and its aftermath. Thankfully for her and her family, she is rescued before the Cultural Revolution is declared. There is a sense in which the Lord family was able to extricate Sansan at just the right time. Hindsight shows that if they had not acted when they did, the window of opportunity would have slammed shut on her. Sansan’s memoir is not a pleasant or comfortable narrative, but it is a valuable narrative for students of history and those interacting with Chinese culture. The societal trauma of these events, compounded by those from which Sansan was saved, have cast a long shadow into modern China as Sansan’s peers enter middle age – most of which did not have family outside China to pull them out of the morass.

For more non-fiction about family division between East and West through Chinese political upheaval, see
Shanghai Faithful: Betrayal and Forgiveness in a Chinese Christian Family, Jennifer Lin, 2017
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

For more Bette Bao Lord, see this fictional account of three friends navigating twentieth century China…
The Middle Heart, Bette Bao Lord,
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

9 reviews6 followers
September 2, 2019
This book served as an exceptional glimpse into communist China when Mao was in power. I don't personally know about the daily struggles of this time period. The real living conditions and simple but complicated every day life tasks were brought to mind in a nitty-gritty way. I was amazed at she lived her day to day in terms of food, clothing, comforts, interactions and her perception on the events that where happening out side of her world. I also found it interesting that the people there had a complete lack of occupation choice.
Profile Image for Amanda B.
776 reviews92 followers
July 3, 2017
I read this over and over in middle school.
Profile Image for Toni Miranda.
201 reviews3 followers
June 25, 2014
This is a great companion to Red Scarf Girl. I think more people need to read these books so they can see a true picture of the effects of Socialism. It is scary how easy it is for a tyrant to use fear to control people and to get them to do things they would never have done before.
Profile Image for Tammy.
357 reviews
September 4, 2019
This book was published in 1964, so it's a wonder I came across it. I have volunteered in China working with elementary school teachers of rural towns, so this book was particularly interesting. From the first page I was fascinated with the story. The book is easy to read with a look into a young girl's life in China in the 1950s and 60s. Although as an American, we occasionally hear about Communist China or Mao, it's always difficult for me to really understand what it was like. We also hear about these things from an outside perspective, rather than from the experience of someone living through it. This book made history more real.

Although life in China was not easy for Sansan, I felt like the story she told was balanced and believable.

Definitely an interesting read and sheds light onto why Chinese immigrants from her time may act so differently. Certainly, the stereotyped emphasis on a good education is no surprise after reading this book.

Bottom line: Absolutely worth a read if you are at all interested in China.
Profile Image for Lynn.
Author 2 books174 followers
August 8, 2018
This is, as stated in the subtitle, a true story of a young girl's experiences growing up in Communist China. She was only a little girl, about four, when Mao came into power and began his endless, circular, campaigns. Life quickly became stressful and confusing, and even children learned how to keep their true thoughts to themselves and tout the party line.

Sansan's story is also one of discovery. She learns that she was given up by her real mother at the age of one; her parents left China so her father could take a job in the United States. By the time the family tried to reclaim their daughter, the rules and regulations of the People's Republic of China made it impossible for them to return or for her to leave. Part of her story is how she deals with this discovery, and how she finds a way to reconnect with her true family.
Profile Image for Emma.
134 reviews
July 23, 2007
Before the Communist party took control of China, Bette Lord's family left China to spend a year in the United States. They did not intend to be gone long and did not think that leaving their daughter, Bette's sister, would be a problem since she was so young. However, changes happened quickly and the two separated parts of the the family are unable to reunite. As a result Sansan grows up believing her aunt is her mother. Her story provides an interesting perspective into life in Communist China.
343 reviews2 followers
March 10, 2020
Good book that details what life was like under Mao Tse-tung. You should read Spring Moon too.
1 review1 follower
October 2, 2015
Enlightening and engaging

This book served as an excellent glimpse into communist China. I'm an American, so I don't know about the daily struggles of the Chinese. The real living conditions were brought to mind in a detailed way. I was amazed at how little these people live on in terms of food, clothing, creature comforts and knowledge of world events, not to mention the complete lack of choice of vocation or profession. Truly eye-opening. There were only a few typos, and it was well written and easy to follow.
Profile Image for Robin.
354 reviews
March 1, 2009
I traded my sad boy memoirs for a sad girl memoir.
This is historically interesting, and has a place in the women's narratives I collect, but I won't say it is a must-read, or even very compelling -- other than the trueness of it, and the importance that someone recorded it while it was still such a fresh memory and without much of a revisionist view.
Profile Image for sedge.
90 reviews15 followers
January 17, 2009
In grade seven, my teacher-frenemy loaned this to me; I remember being absorbed and freaked-out in equal measure, and I'd love to read it again. I suspect my perspective has changed quite a bit.
Profile Image for Jill.
45 reviews
Read
February 9, 2010
EIGHTH MOON by Sansan and Bette Lord (1964)
17 reviews2 followers
November 8, 2012
This book shared a glimpse into the rarely seen world of early Communist China. So glad I read it and felt so grateful for the freedoms of America.
2 reviews
December 26, 2021
I was originally planning on keeping this with the books I'm saving for my daughter, but have decided to send it to my teenage neice.
Profile Image for Lee.
1,022 reviews
October 5, 2015
Quick read. Story of a young girl and her struggles in Communist China with everything from food, school, and finally getting a pass to leave China and settle in the US with her real family.
1,629 reviews7 followers
April 19, 2017
I thought this was an interesting look at the Chinese Revolution. I was shocked at some of the many difficulties the Chinese had to endure based on being a good citizen of China. A great story about something I knew little about. A great first hand look at that time period and a young girl who found freedom by coming to the US to see her family. Fascinating stuff.
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews

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