Summary:
This ambitious novel presents unusual events ten years after
an international adoption. Because of
the Chinese one-child policy, Chinese peasant woman Xiao Lu abandons her second
daughter Chun in a rural market, knowing that the child will be sent to an
orphanage. An American couple adopt the child, calling her Katie. As a
celebration for Katie’s tenth birthday, they return to southwest China, hoping
to meet the birth mother.
In a series of unusual events, they find Xiao Lu, and it is,
at first, a joyous event. Troubles mount, however, as the birth mother wants
Katie to stay with her, and Katie feels a mystical bond between them. Xiao Lu,
having left her husband, now lives as a hermit in a hut on the slopes of The
One Hundred Mile Mountain. She sweeps the 100 steps of The Elephant Temple
daily and practices calligraphy in her hut.
Pep and Clio Macy, having married late, could not get
pregnant. The novel satirizes them as aging Yuppies,
spoiled and materialistic.
Clio wears a Movado watch worth hundreds if not thousands of dollars. The
family’s cockerpoo has been boarded at home. Katie dislikes being the only Chinese
American in her private school.
After the birth mother has been found, the mood of the book changes.
Xiao Lu wants her child returned, and the Macys fear that they are in danger.
In the last 100 pages, nature itself attacks the Americans with snakes, monkeys,
bats, a huge millipede, and even the weather. Pep is injured and receives rough,
traditional medical treatment from a monk; it appears to be effective, however,
in healing his heart physically and spiritually—a resonance with the book’s
title. Katie becomes more and more like Xiao, learning calligraphy and some
Chinese language. When Xiao is grievously injured by the monkeys, the Macys effectively
care for her, and previous conflicts are resolved.
View full annotation