Ah Koo, the lone survivor of his ancient family and great-great-grandfather of the book’s protagonist, Simon Koo, flees his home in China during the Taiping Rebellion and begins a new life in the gold fields of 1850′s Australia. Through hard work and perseverance, Ah Koo eventually acquires a bit of land (10 acres of plundered cedar beside a permanently running creek), a Chinese wife named Little Sparrow (thanks to an arrangement with the headman of his village in China, of whom he requested that she should be strong and willing to work and must come from a lucky family with a reputation for predominantly male offspring), and a full set of carpenter’s chisels.
Little Sparrow’s recurring dream and it’s subsequent interpretations left me cold and had me wondering if I was going to finish reading this book. Unless it’s sci-fi, dream sequences and premonitions or anything not grounded in reality (yeah, I know, it’s my reality – your mileage may vary) usually indicate a lazy author who doesn’t know how to stay in control of their storyline. So at this point I’m thinking maybe a 2-star rating.
As the story continues Ah Koo and his new bride set about creating the beginnings of what soon becomes a familial dynasty of lawyers, doctors and businessmen.
Fast forward a few generations to the 1960′s where Simon, who wants to be his own man and prove himself, is reluctant to go to work for any of the family businesses. Instead, he says goodbye to Australia and his well-to-do family and finds employment in Singapore as an advertising executive for Wing Brothers Advertising, a terrible trio of odd and crooked brothers.
Things pick up as we are introduced to Singapore, the squeeze and the culture of the Orient (where saving face is valued more than money) and meet a cast of interesting new characters.
While Simon is busy learning the ins and outs of Singapore’s advertising world and becoming more aware by the day of the Wing Brothers peculiarities, he meets the impeccably beautiful, and seemingly unobtainable, Miss Mercy B. Lord. What a great name for a gorgeous woman, eh? That alone merits a bump up in the ratings—3 stars! Simon is quickly warned by the Wing Brothers, in no uncertain terms, to stay away from Miss Mercy B. Lord, but it’s too late. He has already fallen in love with her.
As Simon and Mercy begin to hook up, also very much against the sternly expressed desires of Mercy’s fearsome boss, Beatrice Fong, who, evidently, has it within her power to make life miserable for Mercy, things begin to heat up. It turns out that Mercy and Beatrice have a mysterious secret which Mercy is keeping from Simon and the rest of us. It’s a secret that could put an end to Simon and Mercy’s budding romance, and Mercy puts it to Simon just that way—accept her as she is and ask no questions or she will leave and he will never see her again.
Fortune Cookie was my introduction to Bryce Courtenay. I like the way he writes and I’m looking forward to reading more of his books. I initially rated the book at 3-stars. It wasn’t until a few days later that I decided I really liked it and bumped it up to 4-stars. Strange how that happens sometimes.