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Outrun the Moon von Stacey Lee
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Outrun the Moon (2017. Auflage)

von Stacey Lee (Autor)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
3821766,570 (3.92)1
"On the eve of the San Fransisco Earthquake of 1906, Mercy Wong--daughter of Chinese immigrants--is struggling to hold her own among the spoiled heiresses at prestigious St. Clare's School. When tragedy strikes, everyone must band together to survive"--
Mitglied:Owlpower
Titel:Outrun the Moon
Autoren:Stacey Lee (Autor)
Info:Speak (2017), Edition: Reprint, 416 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
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Tags:Holiday 2017a

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Outrun the Moon von Stacey Lee

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More historical fiction with ABCs! Boarding school hijinks!Genuinely good female friendships, and a mean girl who doesn't twirl her mustache and becomes a fully developed person!

I am delighted to live in an era of #ownvoices work that include expanding to periods of history people just aren't as aware of- especially under the current administration I feel like I repeatedly bring up the Chinese Exclusion Act and smaller state-level laws that were designed to box in 'undesirable' immigrants, and here it is, right on the page (my other longtime favorite historical YA is Laurence Yep's [b:The Traitor|25261|The Traitor (Golden Mountain Chronicles, #4)|Laurence Yep|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348823964s/25261.jpg|2675977] about the Rock Springs massacre). We were the first people this country legally denied on the basis of nationality, but thanks to the persistence of some, there are families like mine with long roots.

Mercy Wong is tough and persistent- in 1906 when women's worth is largely still defined by marriageability and having children, Mercy finds a book about becoming a businesswoman and dreams of having a global tea-shipping empire. But, as educational opportunities are limited for Chinese, especially girls, she plans on entering the illustrious St. Claire's school for girls. She's admitted, but only if she pretends to be a Chinese heiress which leads to some hilarity as students & faculty ask her about China... when, as someone born here, she has no idea what it's actually like.

Once the earthquake hits, we genreshift a bit into survival mode and don't shy away from the tragedy and chaos, but with a satisfying ending. I do wonder if Stacey Lee will write a historical fiction in the future dealing with the aftermath: because the records for Chinese Americans burned in this earthquake's fires, many illegally immigrated as 'paper sons', claiming that they were born here but their birth certificates were burned. Immigration officials countered this by detaining would-be children and grilling them and their alleged parent for days, corroborating interview answers checking for slipups on # of stairs in a house, who your neighbors were, etc. I really would love to see some Paper Children historical fic, because there's so much drama you can play with while also tying to modern concerns. ( )
  Daumari | Dec 28, 2023 |
Well paced historical fiction, with an alarmingly intelligent main character -- alarming not in her race (chinese, in San Francisco in 1906), or her ambition (to procure better education and pull her family out of poverty), but in her sheer, gutsy, bravado. I found myself cheering and biting my fingernails in equal measure, unsure how she could possibly succeed. Bold, smart, generous of spirit and bossy cheeked, Mercy is a heroine to get behind.

The story is also full of unexpected turns and growth that make the time and place come alive. ( )
  jennybeast | Apr 14, 2022 |
As the author herself states in the notes at the end of the book, it is unlikely that a Chinese American female would be admitted in 1906 to a prestigious private school for white girls. On this basis, the whole story is more like fantasy or alternate history than historical fiction.

And, as other reviewers have said, the language is too modern to be believable in historical fiction, and the description of the experience of the earthquake is almost non-existent.

This is not historical fiction. ( )
  fromthecomfychair | Jan 14, 2022 |
Please note that I gave this book 4.5 stars, but due to Goodreads not allowing half stars, I rounded the book up to 5 stars.

I have never read a novel by Stacey Lee before, but I am going to definitely check out her other books when I get some time. "Outrun the Moon" was a great look back at a tragic event in the city of San Francisco's past (1906 Earthquake) told from the first person point of view by 15 year old Mercy Wong.

I can honestly say that I am totally ignorant about all of the former laws and policies previously enacted in the United States passed in order to segregate Chinese and American born Chinese people in our country's past. I am actually a little ashamed of myself for not looking deeper into that especially since everything that Ms. Lee provided context about just caused me to want to read more and more and more.

I visited San Francisco a few years back for a friend's wedding and the city spoke to me like no other place has since. There are just some places that touch you and make you feel like you came home. I recall being fascinated by everything and I did a Big Bus tour around the city that briefly touched upon the Earthquake of 1906. But even with that context, I still had no idea of the devastation that people were forced to deal with for several days after the first quake.

"Outrun the Moon" takes place a few days before the San Francisco earthquake. Mercy Wong is determined to be enrolled at the St. Clare School for Girls in order to further her education. Mercy believes that if she is able to attend this school she will be able to use what she learns there in order to set up her own successful business. Living in San Francisco's Chinatown with her mother, father, and younger brother Jack, Mercy dreams of being able to make enough money for all of them to live in Nob Hill one day. Using "bribery" Mercy is able to get her foot in the door at St. Clare's, but finds that it may be harder than she thinks to be able to get what she really wants.

Mercy was a wonderful character. She is a 15 year old girl who is doing what she can in order to make sure that her family can be better off. Being the oldest and a girl you get to see how hard she is fighting to be taken on her own merits and not to be treated like a Chinese girl who is not as good as the white people she sees living in better off circumstances around her. Mercy's constant parroting of lines from a business book written by a businesswoman definitely made me smile after a while. I used to do that too when I was younger. Read something that stuck with me and would just repeat it back to friends and family. Thank goodness no one smothered me.

There were parts of me that did get a little bit frustrated with Mercy. I think it was because I wanted her to be cautious and be safe a lot of times during the story, but the character at that point was over everything and said screw it, I am going to do what I am going to do, and damn the consequences.

Other characters included in this book are Mercy's mother, father, her younger brother Jack, her longtime childhood friend Tom, and the girls that she meets at St. Clare's. There are a lot more characters introduced to you as soon as the action moves to St. Clare's but the big stand outs for me were Harry, Francesca, and Elodie. I would seriously love to see a sequel showing how did all of these girls turn out one day.

Though we don't get much insight into Mercy's family life besides crumbs left here and there, I felt their presence through the whole book. I will be honest though that the character of Tom did not do a thing for me. I loved Mercy's relationship/friendship with Francesca more. Those two together were fantastic.

The writing was really good. I know some words here and there from other friends so I already knew what "gwai lo" meant. Ms. Lee has Mercy explain things so I don't think any reader would get lost. Mercy's voice is very distinct the whole way through and read like a 15 year old girl.

The flow though was way too slow at the first half of the book, and the beginning of the book felt like it started mid-story to me. It read like the reader should already know what Mercy was up to. Nothing got explained there for a few chapters later for you to get why Mercy was out looking for a certain herb.

The world building was fantastic to me because this book took real life events and sections of a city and breathed life into the book.

The ending came a bit too fast for me. There was kind of a little cheat I would say surrounding some of the characters. I think that Ms. Lee wanted to make sure that whatever reader came along was not totally thrown into a pit of despair. ( )
  ObsidianBlue | Jul 1, 2020 |
4.5 stars. This was one of the best JF/YA books I’ve read in a while. The characters and story really caught my attention and made me want to keep reading. I didn’t give this 5 stars because of the plausibility of some of the situations (which the author also acknowledges), but these same situations also make up a lot of the plot and help the reader understand Mercy more. I do love her “bossy cheeked” strength and endurance and think she is a girl we could all strive to be like. I also loved the Chinese proverbs and Mrs. Lowery’s words of wisdom sprinkled through out. ( )
  slittleson | Mar 19, 2020 |
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In my fifteen years, I have stuck my arm in a vat of slithering eels, climbed all the major hills of San Francisco, and tiptoed over the graves of a hundred souls.
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"On the eve of the San Fransisco Earthquake of 1906, Mercy Wong--daughter of Chinese immigrants--is struggling to hold her own among the spoiled heiresses at prestigious St. Clare's School. When tragedy strikes, everyone must band together to survive"--

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