genre: memoir
Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother is a treatise on parenting, a realistic
and sometimes harsh portrait of what we as parents can choose to do in
order to create "successful" children. Our author, Amy Chua, is the
daughter of Chinese parents and she whole-heartedly subscribes to the
rote, obedience-based, sometimes-tyrannical model of Chinese Parenting.
The book takes us through her life as the parent of two incredibly
talented daughters, Sophia and Lulu.
Living in America as they do, Sophia and Lulu are very aware of how
different their mother's standards are compared to their peers. And,
frankly, so is our author. She is brutally honest about how her methods
differ from what she terms "Western Parenting," but the truth is, she
gets results. Her daughters have some incredible opportunities because
their mother pushes them so (very very) hard.
Fast moving and very readable, this book really did make me think -
about why I do things the way I do and how maybe the Chinese way does
have some merit. Granted, some stories she tells are SERIOUSLY over the
top, bordering on what we would probably call abusive. Yet, I really
appreciated how Chua didn't sugar-coat anything. I think her style of
narrative, both engaging and humorous, made me try to understand her and
while I certainly don't agree with a lot of what she did, I really
liked reading about it.
note: if you're interested in the content of the books I read, please go to http://ratedreads.com
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
I am so interested to see what the girls do with their lives and how they end up incorporating their mother's parenting style into their own.
My mother borrowed my copy of this and read it. She thought Chua made some valid points but often went too far.
It seems this book's prepress was far worse than the actual content. We just added it to our "book club kits." I hope my book club picks it to read!
Post a Comment