"Janice Page tells a personal yet universal story about how we live inside the families of our childhoods and with the genes we inherit, and then carry our legacies forward as we create families of our own. We are invited to follow Page's complex journey to motherhood as she slowly learns the story of her Chinese mother-in-law's own painful past. These are hard stories but there is never a moment of self-pity or woe here--I felt uplifted during every moment I spent reading these pages. Janice Page's bravery, openness to new experiences, and appealing ability to find the humor in events will bring solace and inspiration to many different kinds of readers."-- "Alice Elliott Dark, author of Fellowship Point"
"In Year of the Water Horse, Janice Page deftly illuminates the power and weight of family history across generations and cultures. Page takes us through the deeply personal journey of adopting a child while navigating the complex landscape of both her own and her husband's family history. The author's desire to embrace but not repeat the past while creating a family of her own delivers a tender and resonant reckoning. Year of the Water Horse is a memoir that will leave you laughing through the tears."-- "A.M. Homes, author of The Mistress's Daughter, This Book Will Save Your Life, The End of Alice and more"
"A gorgeously written, truly funny journey of a woman through womanhood--motherhood, wifehood, personhood, full on adulthood. Page's sentences are crafted with care and they glide along with insight and joy and the precision you would expect from such a serious writer, even when she is not serious. I laughed a lot! Year of the Water Horse is a joy to read."--Julia Sweeney, actress, comedian, and author of If It's Not One Thing, It's Your Mother
"Washington Post editor Page reflects on family trauma and the ties that bind in her funny and affecting debut. Armed with sharp wit and bracing emotional intelligence, Page tackles heavy subjects with an admirably light touch, rendering each of her relatives in three dimensions and prompting readers to think deeply about the legacies they've inherited from their own families."--Publishers Weekly