NPR's Book of the Day

Revisiting ‘The Joy Luck Club’

Nov 8, 2025
Wailin Wong, host of NPR's The Indicator, shares her journey of understanding Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club, reflecting on intergenerational immigrant family themes and how reading it as a teenager differs from now as a parent. Author Jasmine Chan, known for The School for Good Mothers, discusses the enduring influence of the novel on her view of motherhood and community. The conversation dives into the complexities of mother-daughter relationships, cultural communication, and the impact of literature in shaping narratives of connection and empathy today.
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ANECDOTE

Teen Reader Turned Parent

  • Wailin Wong first read The Joy Luck Club around age 14 and found it eye-opening then.
  • Rereading as an adult and a parent made the book feel much more emotional and resonant.
INSIGHT

Contested Representation

  • Critics argued Amy Tan's portrayals orientalize China and depict Asian men poorly, prompting long-standing backlash.
  • Andrew Limbong saw those criticisms but felt the book functions as fiction needing dramatic antagonists.
INSIGHT

Patriarchy As The Real Villain

  • Wailin Wong reads the novel's antagonist as the patriarchy rather than individual men.
  • She argues women's limited options for marriage and motherhood drive many conflicts in the stories.
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