Dragon Springs Road: A Novel

From the author of Three Souls comes a vividly imagined and haunting new novel set in early 20th century Shanghai—a story of friendship, heartbreak, and history that follows a young Eurasian orphan’s search for her long-lost mother.
That night I dreamed that I had wandered out to Dragon Springs Road all on my own, when a dreadful knowledge seized me that my mother had gone away never to return . . .
In 1908, Jialing is only seven years old when she is abandoned in the courtyard of a once-lavish estate near Shanghai. Jialing is zazhong—Eurasian—and faces a lifetime of contempt from both Chinese and Europeans. Without her mother’s protection, she can survive only if the estate’s new owners, the Yang family, agree to take her in.
Jialing finds allies in Anjuin, the eldest Yang daughter, and Fox, an animal spirit who has lived in the haunted courtyard for centuries. But Jialing’s life as the Yangs’ bondservant changes unexpectedly when she befriends a young English girl who then mysteriously vanishes.
Always hopeful of finding her long-lost mother, Jialing grows into womanhood during the tumultuous early years of the Chinese republic, guided by Fox and by her own strength of spirit, away from the shadows of her past. But she finds herself drawn into a murder at the periphery of political intrigue, a relationship that jeopardizes her friendship with Anjuin and a forbidden affair that brings danger to the man she loves.
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Community Reviews
Woven with a remarkable level of imaginative folklore, blended into the reality of this coming-of-age story, I think Dragon Springs Road is the type of book most readers will fall in love with. The scope of this novel was so intricate and in depth but the author never let the story get away from the reader. The steady pace of the narrative that is driven by this slight bread-crumb-of-secrets trail that the main character, Jialing, follows over the years and the mystical presence of a sly, influential and secretive Fox spirit is sure to hook any reader, as it did me.
One of the things I enjoyed most about this book was the mystery of Dragon Springs Road on a broader scale. I teetered back and forth with skepticism on whether or not the unfortunate and troubling events that take place on this stretch of road were the result of a supernatural force—perhaps a curse—or simply the rippling affects of the Chinese Civil War (and the external affects of WWI) and the increasing level of foreign/European culture influences.
In the center of all this, Jialing spends most of her young life and young adulthood as a bond servant to the Yang family. While enduring not only the troubling uncertainly of her mother's whereabouts and the security of solid future, but the constant ridicule, racial prejudice and shame from nearly everyone she encounters because she is a biracial—a zazhong—child.
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