Where Waters Meet Audiobook By Zhang Ling cover art

Where Waters Meet

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Where Waters Meet

By: Zhang Ling
Narrated by: Nancy Wu, Dan John Miller
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A daughter discovers the dramatic history that shaped her mother’s secret life in an emotional and immersive novel by Zhang Ling, the bestselling author of A Single Swallow.

There was rarely a time when Phoenix Yuan-Whyller’s mother, Rain, didn’t live with her. Even when Phoenix got married, Rain, who followed her from China to Toronto, came to share Phoenix’s life. Now at the age of eighty-three, Rain’s unexpected death ushers in a heartrending separation.

Struggling with the loss, Phoenix comes across her mother’s suitcase—a memory box Rain had brought from home. Inside, Phoenix finds two old photographs and a decorative bottle holding a crystallized powder. Her auntie Mei tells her these missing pieces of her mother’s early life can only be explained when they meet, and so, clutching her mother’s ashes, Phoenix boards a plane for China. What at first seems like a daughter’s quest to uncover a mother’s secrets becomes a startling journey of self-discovery.

Told across decades and continents, Zhang Ling’s exquisite novel is a tale of extraordinary courage and survival. It illuminates the resilience of humanity, the brutalities of life, the secrets we keep and those we share, and the driving forces it takes to survive.

©2023 Zhang Ling (P)2023 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.
Family Life Historical Fiction China Survival 20th Century Fiction Heartfelt Suspenseful Genre Fiction Women's Fiction

Critic reviews

“Zhang’s strengths in Where Waters Meet are her intriguing interwoven plot; vivid, surprising characters; and evocation of the political crises during Chunyu’s lifetime.”Historical Novels Review

“This emotional and heartbreaking novel is a tale of courage, survival, and human resilience in the face of war and repression.”Booklist

“A stunning, gorgeous novel. Zhang Ling’s Where Waters Meet is haunting and heartbreaking as it navigates mother-daughter relationships in the face of war and famine. I simply couldn’t put it down.”—Devi S. Laskar, author of The Atlas of Reds and Blues and Circa

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the story was okay, learning about a patent in death is always hard. the narration was hard to listen to, and sometimes the story got 'lost'.

good, but...

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I started off very excited, but the book was slow. I kept telling myself it would get better, but I just got more confused. The names and times were too much for me. It jumps from present to past and I couldn't keep up. It's a good story, but I don't know if I'd recommend it.

I really wanted to like this book.

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I enjoyed the story and learning about the history in China at that time. However, I felt it was too disjointed (jumping from era to ear to follow well on audio. I would have liked it better with a book in my hand so I knew where I was in the story

Good and informative story. However, too disjointed for audio.

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Characters not developed(Phoenix and George) for me it was hard to follow. It jumped generations with no warning and that made it hard for me with an audio book. Maybe an actual book would be easier. 👎

Tried to like it: finished it anyway

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I found the book, very long winded and the main Characters Pheonix and George not well developed.

Where waters meet

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