Amy Tan Books
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Tails of Devotion: A Look at the Bond Between People and Their Pets Review Date: 2007-09-24
Thanks for Such a Great and Generous Show of Love for AnimalsReview Date: 2007-04-03
Essential Reading For Any Pet OwnerReview Date: 2007-01-30
Karen Leslie, Executive Director, The Pet Fund
A Wonderful Gift ItemReview Date: 2007-01-19
Our 'Book of the Year' Choice!Review Date: 2006-12-21
The life-affirming story of Elizabeth, a homeless woman living in the Bay Area along with her faithful companion, Hero, alone is worth the price of this lovely book!
In addition, Emily Scott Pottruck is generously donating 100% of the proceeds from 'Tails of Devotion' to non-profit animal welfare groups! So, along with receiving this beautiful book (which you will treasure for years to come!), you will also have the wonderful feeling that comes with knowing that your purchase has enabled animal welfare organizations to continue their work to help less fortunate animals.
'Tails of Devotion' will make a wonderful gift for anyone who has ever known the joy of loving ... and being loved by ... a beloved animal companion.

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ENDEARING FELINE WHIMSEYReview Date: 2006-11-16
A home run for a Chinese native and a cat lover!Review Date: 2005-10-16
SagwaReview Date: 2005-08-17
Siamese cat lovers....Review Date: 2004-01-11
It's a bit long for a bed time story, but really fun! Kids ages 8 or 9 and up may be able to read it themselves, but the beginners may have a hard time.
Beautifully written and illustrated book!Review Date: 2003-07-08

Very goodReview Date: 2008-06-12
Beautiful Children's BookReview Date: 2007-04-05
kids love itReview Date: 2007-03-05
A Good Read At Any AgeReview Date: 2003-01-22
On a rainy day as grandchildren whine that they can't play outside their grandmother tells them a tale based on her own experiences as a child. Using this method Tan provides an allegorical tale concerning children and their wishes. Telling the children of her wishes as a young girl, Ying Ying tells the children a story about her own wishes at the times of the Moon Festival. And as all folk tales provide, Tan is adept at providing her readers with an adventurous tale compete with the mysterious Moon Lady and a moral to the story.
This is a good book for young children who cannot only learn about the Chinese culture but the saying "Be careful what you wish for." I also recommend this book at any age since it is also important to remember this as we move on in life.
Read to Your Child to Develop Bonding and Intellect!Review Date: 2000-08-19
To help other parents apply this advice, as a parent of four I consulted an expert, our youngest child, and asked her to share with me her favorite books that were read to her as a young child. The Moon Lady was one of her picks.
Adapted from Amy Tan's best selling book, The Joy Luck Club, The Moon Lady is a perfect book for encouraging children to read with and talk to their grandmother. The book also very subtly encourages children to take more responsibility for their own lives. The story provides a model for parents and grandparents for how to create their own stories to help children learn important lessons.
The story begins as three girls, Maggie, Lily and June, are bored because they have to stay in on a rainy day and can think of nothing that they want to do. Their grandmother, Nai-nai, is with them. Nai-nai tells them a story about when she was a young girl in China, and she ran and shouted and could not stand still also.
The story is about the day she told the Moon Lady her secret wish. Then unfolds a wonderful story of a young girl's adventure on a special trip to see the Moon Lady. Along the way, she sees many things she has not seen before, falls overboard, is rescued by a fishing family, and finds her family again after meeting the Moon Lady. In the process, she has one of those epiphanies that make all of our lives better -- that she is in charge of creating her own future.
The story is filled with references to family bonding and what is and is not proper behavior. The story also shows what family life was like for a somewhat well-to-do Chinese family in China at the beginning of the 20th century. These references are made all the more realistic by a wonderful series of drawings by Gretchen Schields with bright colors, beautiful detail, and authentic depictions of the China of years ago. It's almost like living a beautiful dream.
Then Nai-nai takes her granddaughters out to dance in the moon after the story is over.
Of all the children's books I have read, I place this one in the top ten for the 4-8 age category.
A central problem for many children today is that too much television, too many structured activities, and too little free time leave them feeling lost when nothing is on the agenda. Our misconception is that they need regimented lives like those that soldiers lead to fulfill their potential. This book will encourage you to readdress that misconception, and focus on how to make your children more competent in thinking about others, being more independent, and designing their own beneficial activities. That is all very important to actually unleashing their full potential. When you are done, think about how perhaps your own life needs a little improvement along these same lines.
Enjoy!
Donald Mitchell (donmitch@2000percentsolution.com)


A summary of Chinese beliefs and cultural practices Review Date: 2004-10-07

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A unforgettable BookReview Date: 2000-05-07

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Good...Review Date: 2008-05-30
Money well-spent, I must say! BTW, it is very funny too at times!
I love this book !Review Date: 2008-03-22
It has been years since I read this book but all the characters have stayed in my memory and often pop in my mind like a good Seinfeld episode.
Another great readReview Date: 2008-03-01
In this story, Olivia, daughter of an American mother and a Chinese father, discovers that she has a Chinese half-sister. She meets 18-year-old Kwan for the first time shortly after their father's death. Kwan adores her new sibling and introduces Olivia to her Chinese heritage through stories and memories. Olivia finds Kwan's information sessions embarrassing, especially as she talks about past lives. As Olivia grows older, she can find a place in her life for Kwan's Chinese superstitions, spirits, and reincarnations. Eventually Olivia--now a photographer--travels to China on assignment with her writer husband, and Kwan serves as their interpreter. When the group visits the village where Kwan grew up, Olivia experiences an epiphany about Kwan's lessons: Our departed loved ones are lost only to our ordinary senses; by remembering, we can find them again anytime using our hundred "secret" senses. Definitely something to think about!
the hundred secret sensesReview Date: 2008-03-14
My all-time favorite - very originalReview Date: 2008-02-04

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My Favorite Amy Tan BookReview Date: 2008-03-01
Amazing, amazedReview Date: 2008-02-09
I highly recommend this book to any daughter, any Asian, any writer, and any person with an open mind/heart who wants to know a little bit more about an intriguing, challenging life.
The Best In Chinese Take-OutReview Date: 2008-06-28
I hated literature in high school and college, because all the professors always talked about all the "hidden meaning" and symbolism in persons, objects and events happening in the book. I thought this was a bunch of BS. So thank you Amy for proving me right!
It is a well written compilation of stories, observations and even commencement addresses. My favorite was her thoughts on waiting to be introduced for a talk and seeing the Cliff Notes of her book on display. Nice touch. I would probably appreciate Joy Luck Club after reading this book.
audio version is charming, engaging, magicalReview Date: 2008-05-03
The AUDIO version of the book is a revelation: Amy Tan has a lively and lovely voice, she is a gifted mimic, and she does a fabulous job of reading this great book.
There are some very sad parts, you will definitely be moved to think and consider wider concepts, but it is completely delightful and thick with insight.
Now I Know AmyReview Date: 2008-04-20

A different perspective....Review Date: 2007-04-28
I imagine almost everyone who is reading this has heard of the right and left brain split. The left brain is more linear and the right brain more specialized in synthetic type thought. What I find in career counseling and finding a path is that most people neglect the first part, which is a right hemisphere process that looks inward for values and a vision. This is precisely what this book focuses on. There are many books out there on "how to do" the left hemisphere tactical part of executing on a vision. My guess is this book was published because it meets a need in the market for more of this type of information.
Another thing I really enjoyed about this title was that it sticks to a simple formula. Just like in music or sports, mastering fundamentals is the key to high performance. The book also takes the important key concepts and illustrates them through interesting vignettes from the lives of high achievers such as Oprah and Lance Armstrong. This brings the concepts alive and seems to have a lot of value. Culturally, we have been telling stories to each other for 7,500 years and its probably the most natural way for concepts and principles to land deeply.
I get the sense that this author believes in what he says and most likely embodies the principles he is talking about. Some of the more useful topics covered are finding your passion within i.e. finding a personally meaningful vision, looking at the habits and patterns you might have that are self defeating, how to develop your abilities via self discipline, appreciating what you have and your unique gifts and exercising your capacities in the world. He also talks about giving and how you will get what you want in life by having something worthwhile to give that is connected to a meaningful purpose.
While I agree that means are as important than ends, you can't hit a target you can't see or that is fuzzy. This book will help you to get clear and give you a roadmap if you feel stuck. It will help you to find a way to combine your gifts and passions in a way that will meet the needs of others without abandoning your true values.
Another added value of this text is that it is riddled with excellent quotes, which you can use as affirmations. Personally, I think this alone makes the book worth its price. A few examples are:
"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, this, is not an act, but a habit." Aristotle
"The best way to find yourself, is to lose yourself in service to others."
Mahatma Gandhi
"We are always getting ready to live, but never living."
Ralph Waldo Emerson
"If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with success unexpected in common hours." Henry David Thoreau
This book is also filled with many powerful inquiries that will lead you to a deeper knowledge of yourself, such as:
How do you want to be remembered?
How can you use your gift - today - to make a positive difference in someone's life?
How can you set up your rules for success so that you feel like a winner everyday?
I have some recommendations for more left hemisphered linear people who feel they don't need inspiration or this type of approach. Zen and the Art of Making a Living: A Practical Guide to Creative Career Design (Arkana) provides both perspectives, What Color Is Your Parachute Workbook: How to Create a Picture of Your Ideal Job or Next Career and How You Do Anything Is How You Do Everything: A Workbook. Something even more skewed toward a linear approach is Goals : Setting And Achieving Them On Schedule, See You at the Top: 25th Anniversary Edition and Secrets of the Millionaire Mind: Mastering the Inner Game of Wealth. I also like The Beginner's Guide to Finding Your Perfect Job: How to Discover Your Real Life's Work although this is strongly right brain focused with lots of visualization type exercises. You can also see more recommendation on my listmania lists under career and business categories.
Finally, I agree with the other reviewer that Stephen Covey's materials and Now, Discover Your Strengths are excellent resources. I feel they complement rather than replace this particular book and I respect that everyone is different and has different needs. I'm glad everyone's opinion is counted on Amazon and I appreciate the credibility and opinions of other reviewers who I sometimes agree with and other times do not.
Time spent reading this will pay dividends...Review Date: 2007-05-13
Contents:
Part 1 - Discover It: How This Book Can Change Your Life - My Story; Find the Fire Within; Are Your Life Patterns Holding You Hostage?; How to Give Meaning and Purpose to Your Life; Have You Been Listening to the Voice?; Discover the True You You Never Knew; What a Face-Lift Can't Hide; Discover Your Gift
Part 2 - Develop It: What Really Separates Winners from Losers; The Secret of Top Achievers; The Unglamourous Side of Becoming a Celebrity; Are Your Dreams on Life Support?; Avoid the Goal-Setting Trap; Develop Your Gift
Part 3 - Appreciate It: These Are Extraordinary Times; Has America Lost Its Way?; A Little Perspective; Avoid Premature Aging with One Word; Appreciate Your Gift
Part 4 - Use It: Learning to Deal with Change; For Better or For Worse; Confronting Life's Struggles; How to Face Your Fears; How You Can Succeed by Failing; Get Your Groove Back; Use Your Gift
Part 5 - Give It Away: Follow Your Compass; The Essence of Success; The Secret to Happiness, Joy, and Peace of Mind; Are We Here to Serve or to Be Served?; Give Your Gift Away
Bibliography
Souza looks at the "gift" process as a five step approach. First you discover your gift, then you work at developing it. Appreciating what you have to offer and actually using it comes next, followed by giving yourself away through the use of your gift. Each chapter deals with a discrete component of the process, and involves looking at the life story of someone who has excelled in that area. The chapter wraps up with an applicable quote, the person you should remember for inspiration, and questions to contemplate in relation to what you've just read. With a clear and engaging writing style, Souza pulls the reader in and the meat of the content becomes something that just makes sense.
What I appreciated most about the style of his book was the biographies of the particular individuals. Granted, in all the examples the outcomes are what you'd expect with hard work and perseverance. But I didn't get the feeling that I was reading "revisionist history" that so often happens when you read the life stories of well-known individuals. Souza makes it clear that many "overnight sensations" and people who have everything had plenty of hard times where it would have been very easy to give up (and I'm sure many others have). Sylvester Stallone and Kurt Warner are but two of many that overcame stacked odds and still succeeded. Seeing how others have struggled helps put your own situation in perspective.
This is one of those books that I'll be re-reading a number of times. No matter how many times you see this material, you are always adding new experiences to your application of it. A very enjoyable read, and one that pays dividends...
Discover Your Greatest Gift: Your PurposeReview Date: 2007-06-25
What are the right things? And how do we know what are the right things FOR US? How do we discover our unique purpose, our reason for being, and how do we stir the fires of passion, creativity, enthusiasm and joy?
In his well-written guide to self-awareness, that combines self-help advice, timeless wisdom, philosophical musings, and commonsense language, Mr. Souza outlines a process for success and purpose that embraces the totality of being: body, mind and spirit. In a sense, the principles are not new. However, the author organizes and synthesizes the material in an engaging manner, interspersing the message with inspirational stories of men and women (celebrities and non-celebrities), who have found clarity and focus in a world of competing temptations and confusion.
This is good stuff! The book lends itself to repeated examination, particularly with respect to the challenges faced by the individual reader. Mr. Souza reminds us that pursuing our passions, discovering our uniqueness, and creating our joy can be both practical . . . and visionary.
A book that you're going to feel compelled to read more than once!Review Date: 2007-06-19
WERE BORN TO BE, notes that:
Just as musicians must make music, poets must write, and
artists must paint, we all have a unique gift designed for a
specific vocation that will bring both meaning and purpose
to our lives. True joy and happiness will continue to elude
us until we use that gift to become who we were born to be.
Souza then describes how he found this unique gift for
himself and, in doing so, shows how others can do the same.
He also presents countless real-life examples from such famed
successes as Lance Armstrong, Amy Tang, Richard Branson.
I gained so many valuable ideas from reading BECOME WHO YOU WERE
BORN TO BE that I'm going to reread it in the near future, if
just to remind me about the "no regrets" strategy that Souza uses
to make life's daily decisions:
By analyzing each decision closely and making a conscious
choice about which path we believe will lead us to long-term
happiness, we'll better our odds of achieving it. If you think
that at some point in the future you might regret a decision
you're thinking about making, choose a different path. You'll
find that this strategy is also helpful in breaking out of the
short-timer's mentality of doing only what's easiest today at
the expense of tomorrow. When you start with the end in mind,
you better your chances of actually liking where you're going to
end up.
And then there was this invaluable tidbit:
Imagine that every day is a holiday. But instead of presents, you
give a friendly smile to a passerby, you give the right of way to the
guy at the stop sign, you give a compliment to a stranger, you give
a meal to a homeless person, you rejoice in someone else's
success. It doesn't take much to brighten someone's day. All that
you give will be returned to you-and then some.
I also liked the many famous and not-so-famous quotes that were
used, along with the "questions to contemplate" that he presented
at the end of each chapter . . . for example:
If you could have any job, what would it be? If you could live anyplace,
were would it be? If you could do anything, what would it be?
My only nitpick with the book was that I think it could have used
a better job of documentation . . . Souza includes an extensive
Bibliography; however, I would have wanted to see reference
to the items he cites in the actual pages of BECOME WHO
YOU WERE BORN TO BE.
an EXCEPTIONAL BOOK!Review Date: 2007-04-19
Brian Souza tells it 'like it is' - in a compelling and honest way - authenticated by his own personal experiences.
As a Financial Advisor, Business Consultant and Coach, I see much of what he shares with my own clients.
I see far too many professionals today being swept up in the 'wave' - to achieve - to excel - to arrive. And in the process, they (most often) face high stress levels, broken families, depression and burnout. All in the pursuit of "lifestyle".
They suffer deeply because of it. They lose their real identity and true purpose in 'the chase', as Brian so accurately describes. More tragically, they lose sight of their inner talent - their God-given GIFT to humanity.
Brian's book triggered for me, another twist on this (my own opinion here)...
Despite the very high incomes that (successful) business owners and professionals can generate - most in North America, and beyond, are suffering from FINANCIAL ILLNESS.
And it's a growing disease that's rapidly getting out of control.
For example...
-- Reliable statistics are "showing" us that 90% (yes, 90%!) of the population reaches retirement age - at or below the poverty line - and that's an alarming reality, just by itself! I see these figures.
-- People today (including high rollers) have amassed "crushing" Personal DEBT loads.
-- Credit Cards are "maxed out" to the hilt - in the name of 'maintaining' lifestyle.
And it is "suffocating" them - it's like being in a prison of bondage.
Sadly - none of our Educational Institutions really teach the "cure" for any of this - they are "bankrupt" as far as giving us the very basic coaching and the knowledge we need - to enjoy FINANCIAL WELLNESS.
Personally, I believe that the final value of our lives will never be measured by - the size or price of our homes - or by the toys and things we accumulate. It will be measured by how we use - our time - our money - and our God-given talents - to "help other people" - and to "make this world a better place" - as we take our journey through life.
Along this same theme, Brian Suza's new book really 'lays it out' - and then presents a 'plan' - but more importantly - he also gives us large portions of both hope and inspiration (thank you, Brian).
This book is an important read - a BEAUTY - absolutely worth 5-Stars.
Sincerely,
Peter Arnold, CLU, CFC / Founder
Business Achievers Academy / Canada

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Beautiful bookReview Date: 2008-06-25
TouchingReview Date: 2007-06-08
Wonderful book!Review Date: 2007-01-25
HeartbreakingReview Date: 2007-01-06
From a parentReview Date: 2006-08-05

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Excellent!Review Date: 2004-10-04
treasure thisReview Date: 2005-05-26
A Nice Little BookReview Date: 2003-07-13
Heart to soul...good snippets of thoughts.Review Date: 2005-08-29
Wonderful, Charming BookReview Date: 2001-07-08
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