Shanghailanders
A dazzling and ambitious debut novel that follows a cosmopolitan Shanghai household backward in time--beginning in 2040 and moving through our present and the recent past--exploring their secrets, their losses, and the ways a family makes and remakes itself across the years.
2040: Wealthy real estate investor Leo Yang--handsome, distinguished, a real Shanghai man--is on the train back to the city after seeing his family off at the airport. His sophisticated Japanese-French wife, Eko, and their two eldest children, Yumi and Yoko, are headed for Boston, though one daughter's revelation will soon reroute them to Paris. 2039: Kiko, their youngest daughter and an aspiring actress, decides to pursue fame at any cost, like her icon Marilyn Monroe. 2038: Yumi comes to Yoko in need, after a college-dorm situation at Harvard goes disastrously wrong.
As the years rewind to 2014, Shanghailanders brings readers into the shared and separate lives of the Yang family parent by parent, daughter by daughter, and through the eyes of the people in their orbit--a nanny from the provinces, a private driver with a penchant for danger, and a grandmother whose memories of the past echo the present. We glimpse a future where the city's waters rise and the specter of apocalypse is never far off. But in Juli Min's hands, we also see that whatever may change, universal constants remain: love is complex, life is not fair, and family will always be stubbornly connected by blood, secrets, and longing.
Brilliantly constructed and achingly resonant, Shanghailanders is an unforgettable exploration of marriage, relationships, and the layered experience of time.
These book club questions are from the publisher, Spiegel & Grau.
Book club questions for Shanghailanders by Juli Min
Use these discussion questions to guide your next book club meeting.
Shanghailanders is a story told backward through time from 2040 to 2014. How did telling the story this way inform your reading experience?
All the members of the Yang family are keeping their own secrets, and we see the consequences ripple out in varying ways. Discuss how the relationships between family members are affected by these secrets.
Min deftly tackles the nuances of class structure in Shanghai. How do class differences play out throughout the course of the novel?
Eko Yang is an expat—or “Shanghailander”—and her connection to Shanghai ebbs and flows over time. What connects her to the city? How do changes in her life lead her to define herself as Chinese, Japanese, French—or Shanghailander—at different times?
Discuss the relationship between Leo and Eko. How does it shift? What actions from the past inform their relationship in the present?
Throughout the course of the novel, Yumi and Yoko have a strained relationship. What contributes to this dynamic? Is there anything left unsaid between them that adds to the tension?
Discuss the chapters featuring the Yang family’s private driver and their nanny. How do their perspectives change the way you view the Yang family? What unique points of view do they bring to the story?
Discuss the chapter “Ponies on the Mountain in the City on the Sea.” How does Lucy’s death affect Kiko’s relationship with her sisters? How does the confrontation with their father reflect their roles in the family?
Discuss Kiko’s fascination with American culture and fame. What do you think informs her desires?
Did you have a favorite narrator? Was there one perspective you related to the most? Why?
Shanghailanders Book Club Questions PDF
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