"In this ambitious memoir, journalist Lim interrogates her family's history, decoding the truth and reckoning with an overlooked past. Spanning from late-nineteenth-century South China to present-day London, Lim's account covers indentured servitude under British colonialism, opium addiction and the Great Depression, and war between Japan and China. Lim pays close attention to her greatgrandfather and to her great-aunt, who lived in an era when women were denied an education and were either married, mistresses, or sex workers. She also considers the role suicide played in her family and the culture at-large. Enriched with family photographs, this family portrait will engage readers who enjoy such complex histories, such as Ancestor Trouble. (2022)"-- "Booklist"
"The Interpreter's Daughter is a captivating, multigenerational memoir. There is much to think about in this compelling story of history, family loyalty, and personal sacrifice, set in a pivotal time in the history of Southeast Asia. Teresa Lim's quest to uncover a hidden chapter in her family's history makes for a fascinating and richly textured, multigenerational tale. The Interpreter's Daughter is a reminder that all history is personal." --Charmaine Wilkerson, NYT bestselling author of Black Cake "Journalist Lim debuts with a captivating family history focused on her great-aunt, Fanny Law...Lim vividly recreates Singapore in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and lucidly explains historical matters (the 1927 Shanghai massacre) and cultural traditions (spirit tablets). Fans of Lisa See's On Gold Mountain ought to take a look."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"Teresa Lim probes family silences surrounding her beautiful and mysterious great-aunt. Rich in the little-discussed history of Singaporean Chinese, this multigenerational memoir offers a timeless tale of the quest for identity, wholeness and truth. An eloquently enlightening family history."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
"Teresa Lim's memoir The Interpreter's Daughter reveals hidden family secrets amid accounts of love, loss, migration,
and memory. Based on extensive genealogical and historical research, The Interpreter's Daughter weaves historical notes from China, Singapore, and the British Empire together with stories from Lim's family. The Interpreter's Daughter is an expansive memoir about family, migration, and the delicate nature of remembrance."-- "Forward Reviews"
"The Interpreter's Daughter is a rich history of both Singapore and the Law family, her mother's lineage tracing its first known ancestors back to central China...It's apparent that Lim has spent a great deal of time researching her family's history, and she writes about it seamlessly, as if telling the story to a friend."-- "Asian Review of Books"
"Teresa Lim never knew her great aunt Fanny, whose face she'd seen in a photo but whose story was never told. Lim made it her mission to investigate Fanny and in so doing, has written this powerful story of family, feminists, tragedy and truth."-- "Ms. Magazine"