Repeat After Me

A Novel

Fiction & Literature, Psychological, Contemporary Women
Cover of the book Repeat After Me by Rachel DeWoskin, ABRAMS (Ignition)
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Rachel DeWoskin ISBN: 9781468304862
Publisher: ABRAMS (Ignition) Publication: October 4, 2011
Imprint: The Overlook Press Language: English
Author: Rachel DeWoskin
ISBN: 9781468304862
Publisher: ABRAMS (Ignition)
Publication: October 4, 2011
Imprint: The Overlook Press
Language: English

A young New Yorker teaches English to a Chinese dissident in this “heartbreaking and uplifting” novel of love, loss, and language (Publishers Weekly).

Aysha is a twenty-two-year-old plagued by guilt and anxiety ever since her parents’ divorce. But after suffering severe symptoms, she’s now focused on recovering and on teaching her English as a Second Language students. Then a young man named Da Ge joins her ESL class. A dissident with a painful past, he has fled China after the Tianenmen Square massacre, and Aysha finds herself falling irresistibly in love, in spite of the language barrier—and often, the emotional barrier—between them. When he asks her to marry him for the sake of a visa, she cannot say no. It is a relationship that will bring both great joy and great sorrow—and will take Aysha to places she never imagined.

A winner of the ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Award, this is an insightful and emotional novel by the author of Big Girl Small and the memoir Foreign Babes in Beijing.

“Her writing gleams with beautifully realized descriptions of people, places, and encounters.” —Time Out

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A young New Yorker teaches English to a Chinese dissident in this “heartbreaking and uplifting” novel of love, loss, and language (Publishers Weekly).

Aysha is a twenty-two-year-old plagued by guilt and anxiety ever since her parents’ divorce. But after suffering severe symptoms, she’s now focused on recovering and on teaching her English as a Second Language students. Then a young man named Da Ge joins her ESL class. A dissident with a painful past, he has fled China after the Tianenmen Square massacre, and Aysha finds herself falling irresistibly in love, in spite of the language barrier—and often, the emotional barrier—between them. When he asks her to marry him for the sake of a visa, she cannot say no. It is a relationship that will bring both great joy and great sorrow—and will take Aysha to places she never imagined.

A winner of the ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Award, this is an insightful and emotional novel by the author of Big Girl Small and the memoir Foreign Babes in Beijing.

“Her writing gleams with beautifully realized descriptions of people, places, and encounters.” —Time Out

More books from ABRAMS (Ignition)

Cover of the book What I Tell You in the Dark by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book Daughter of the House by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book Wilde's Women by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book The Painted Home by Dena by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book Worlds Apart by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book Modern Mediterranean by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book "R.F.K. Must Die!" by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book Like My Father Always Said&nbsp. . . by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book The Forever Marriage by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book The Gospel & the Zodiac by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book Between the Sheets by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book When I Was Five I Killed Myself by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book Friedrich Nietzsche by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book 40 Days of Dating by Rachel DeWoskin
Cover of the book CakeLove in the Morning by Rachel DeWoskin
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy