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AMY TAN

'Amy Tan' (February 18, 1952) is an American writer whose works explore mother-daughter relationships as well as relationships between Chinese American women and their immigrant parents. In 1993, Tan's adaptation of her most popular fiction work, ''The Joy Luck Club'', became a commercially successful film.
She has written several other books, including ''The Kitchen God's Wife'', ''The Hundred Secret Senses'', and ''The Bonesetter's Daughter'', and a collection of non-fiction essays entitled ''. Her most recent book, ''Saving Fish From Drowning'', explores the tribulations experienced by a group of people who disappear while on an art expedition into the jungles of Burma. In addition, Tan has written two children's books: ''The Moon Lady'' (1992) and ''Sagwa, The Chinese Siamese Cat'' (1994), which was turned into an animated series airing on PBS. She has also appeared on PBS in a short spot on encouraging children to write.
Currently, she is the literary editor for ''West'', Los Angeles Times' Sunday magazine.
Did an uncredited rewrite on The Replacement Killers at the request of Mira Sorvino.

Contents
Life and influences
Early Life
Recent Years
Accomplishments
Awards
Bibliography
Novels
Anthologies edited
Children's books
Non fiction
References
External link
Quotes
External links

Life and influences


Amy’s father, John Tan, was an electrical engineer and Baptist minister who came to America to escape from the Chinese Civil War. Her mother, Daisy, (who inspired Tan’s novel The Kitchen God’s Wife) had divorced her first husband (who was abusive) and lost custody to their three daughters, fled to America on the last boat before the Communist takeover in 1949. Her parents then met and married, and had three children, Amy and her two brothers.
Amy’s father and oldest brother both died of brain tumors within one year of each other. So Daisy moved herself and her two children to the Netherlands and to Switzerland. Switzerland is where Tan finished her high school years. By this time, Tan and her mother were constantly fighting. She enrolled at Linfield College, which her mother had chosen for her, but transferred to San Jose City College with her boyfriend. Amy and her mother did not speak for six months after she left Linfield. Not only did Amy decide against going to the school her mother had chosen, she also decided against following the major her mother had wished for her, choosing to study English and Linguistics instead of Pre-Med. Tan received her Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in both English and Linguistics at San Jose State University. In 1974, Amy married her boyfriend Louis DeMattei. They later settled down in San Francisco.
Her husband, Louis, is a lawyer and practices tax law. Tan now began studying for a Doctorate in Linguistics, first at the University of California Santa Cruz, then later on at Berkeley.
Tan started a business writing firm with a partner. Just as her new career was starting to take off, her mother became very sick. Tan promised her that if she got better, they would travel back to China so Daisy could show her daughter what she had left behind almost forty years before. Daisy, regained her health, so Amy and her mother left for China in 1987. Tan says it was a revelation for her. "It gave her a new perspective on her often-difficult relationship with her mother, and inspired her to complete the book of stories she had promised her agent."
Daisy witnessed her mother committing suicide; Tan believed that her grandmother, her mother and herself all suffered from depression.
Early Life

Amy Tan was born in Oakland, California. "When she was eight years old, she had won her first prize in a writing contest for elementary students with an essay entitled 'What the Library Means to Me.'"
The first book that Tan ever bought was ''The Catcher in the Rye''. At the time, owning the book was considered to be a badge of rebellion for students in her California school. The first copy Tan owned was confiscated from her when she was 14 years old to protect her from its supposed bad influence. This early experience with censorship left an impression on Tan, who notes: "I grew up to be such a stubborn person. I learned I had to think for myself."[1]
As a child Tan was very rebellious. She credits her rebellious nature with starting her career as a writer. Having started out as a pre-med student in college, and being told by her teachers that math and science were her best skills, Tan decided to become an English major while in her first year of college. Just days after her employer told her that writing was her "worst skill" and that she should work to become an account manager, Tan took up non-fiction writing as a freelancer.[2] Tan received a master's degree in linguistics at San José State University. Her first job was as a children's speech-language pathologist.
Recent Years

Since turning 40, Tan has been a member of the literary garage band Rock Bottom Remainders with Dave Barry, Matt Groening and Stephen King, Along with King, she appeared in an episode of ''The Simpsons''

Accomplishments



★ served as Co-producer and Co-screenwriter with Ron Bass for the film adaptation of The Joy Luck Club

★ was the Creative Consultant for Sagwa, the Emmy-nominated television series for children

★ her essays and stories are found in hundreds of anthologies and textbooks, and they are assigned as "required reading" in many high schools and universities

★ appeared as herself in the animated series "The Simpsons."

★ performed as narrator with the San Francisco Symphony and the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra playing an original score for "Sagwa" by composer Nathan Wang

★ lectured internationally at universities, including Stanford, Oxford, Jagellonium, Beijing, and Georgetown both in Washington DC and Doha, Qatar

Awards



★ finalist National Book Award

★ finalist National Book Critics Circle Award

★ finalist Los Angeles Time Fiction Prize

★ Bay Area Book Reviewers Award

★ Commonwealth Gold Award

★ American Library Associations's Notable Books

★ American Library Association's Best Book for Young Adults

★ selected for the National Endowment for the Arts' Big Read

★ New York Times Notable Book

★ Booklist Editors Choice

★ finalist for the Orange Prize

★ nominated for the Orange Prize

★ nominated for the IMPAC Dublin Award

★ Audie Award: Best Non-fiction, Abridged

★ Emmy Award

★ Parents Choice, Best Television Program for Children

★ shortlisted BAFTA Film award, best screenplay adaptation

★ shortlisted WGA Award, best screenplay adaptation

Bibliography


Novels


★ ''The Joy Luck Club'' (1989)

★ ''The Kitchen God's Wife'' (1991)

★ ''The Hundred Secret Senses'' (1995) (Shortlisted for the 1996 Orange Prize)

★ ''The Bonesetter's Daughter'' (2001)

★ ''Saving Fish from Drowning'' (2005).
Anthologies edited


★ ''The Best American Short Stories 1999'' (1999) (with Katrina Kenison)
Children's books


★ ''The Moon Lady'' (1992) (with Gretchen Schields)

★ ''Sagwa, The Chinese Siamese Cat'' (1994) (with Gretchen Schields)
Non fiction


★ ''Mid-Life Confidential: The Rock Bottom Remainders Tour America With Three Cords and an Attitude'' (1994) (with Dave Barry, Stephen King, Tabitha King, Barbara Kingsolver)

★ ''Mother'' (1996) (with Maya Angelou, Mary Higgins Clark)

★ ''The Opposite of Fate: A Book of Musings'' (2003)

References


1.
2. Amy Tan (1990): Mother Tongue. Originally in: ''Threepenny Review'' (reprinted on a page of the Cosumnes River College, retrieved 9 April 2007)

External link



"Amy Tan, Ticked Off About Lyme" Canadian Lyme Disease Foundation reprint of article by J.J. McCoy, ''Washington Post'', August 5, 2003, retrieved March 16, 2006

Quotes



★ "I think books were my salvation, they saved me from being miserable." [1]

★ Tan began her talk by launching into an anecdote about coming upon a Cliffs Notes version of her first novel, "The Joy Luck Club," in a bookstore. Surprised to see her work among Cliffs Notes' "Lord Jim", "Ulysses" and "Hamlet" (all of which she used in college to get through her English literature classes), her first thought was, "I'm not dead yet." (''The Opposite of Fate'' 10)

★ "I'm sitting in the $4.95 bookstore bleachers along with Shakespeare, Conrad and Joyce," she said. "I acknowledge that there is a fundamental difference that separates us. I am a contemporary author and they are not. And since I'm not dead yet, I can talk back." (''The Opposite of Fate'' 10)

External links



Amy Tan Home Page

Official agency page

1989 audio interview by Don Swaim

Amy Tan talks about her book Saving Fish From Drowning

Amy Tan interview on Academy of Achievement
"http://www.amytan.net/ATBiography.aspx"
Cain, William E. American Literature Volume 2. Penguin Academics. New York.

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