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Daughters of the Bamboo Grove: From China to America, a True Story of Abduction, Adoption, and Separated Twins Audiobook, by Barbara Demick Play Audiobook Sample

Daughters of the Bamboo Grove: From China to America, a True Story of Abduction, Adoption, and Separated Twins Audiobook

Daughters of the Bamboo Grove: From China to America, a True Story of Abduction, Adoption, and Separated Twins Audiobook, by Barbara Demick Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Joy Osmanski Publisher: Random House Audio Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 7.17 hours at 1.5x Speed 5.38 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: May 2025 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9798217078677

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

31

Longest Chapter Length:

39:38 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

19 seconds

Average Chapter Length:

21:02 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

3
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Publisher Description

NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW EDITORS’ CHOICE • The heartrending story of twin sisters torn apart by China’s one-child policy and the rise of international adoption—from the author of the National Book Award finalist Nothing to Envy

“Remarkable . . . Barbara Demick movingly traces this history of overseas Chinese adoptions and their ripple effects on both sides of the Pacific.”—The Wall Street Journal

WINNER OF THE CHRISTOPHER J. WELLES MEMORIAL PRIZE • FINALIST FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD • LONGLISTED FOR THE WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR NONFICTION

A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: The New York Times Book Review, NPR, The New Yorker, The Economist


On a warm day in September 2000, a woman named Zanhua gave birth to twin girls in a small hut behind her brother’s home in China’s Hunan province. The twins, Fangfang and Shuangjie, were welcome additions to her family but also not her first children. Living under the shadow of China’s notorious one-child policy, Zanhua and her husband decided to leave one twin in the care of relatives, hoping each toddler on their own might stay under the radar. But, in 2002, Fangfang was violently snatched away. The family worried they would never see her again, but they didn’t imagine she could be sent as far as the United States. She might as well have been sent to another world.

Following stories she wrote as the Beijing bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times, Barbara Demick embarks on a journey that encompasses the origins, shocking cruelty, and long-term impact of China’s one-child rule; the rise of international adoption and the religious currents that buoyed it; and the exceedingly rare phenomenon of twin separation. Today, Esther—formerly Fangfang—lives in Texas, and Demick brings to vivid life the Christian family that felt called to adopt her, unaware that she had been kidnapped. Through Demick’s indefatigable reporting, will the long-lost sisters finally reunite—and will they feel whole again?

A remarkable window into the volatile, constantly changing China of the last half century and the long-reaching legacy of the country’s most infamous law, Daughters of the Bamboo Grove is also the moving story of two sisters torn apart by the forces of history and brought together again by their families’ determination and one reporter’s dogged work.

“Excellent . . . entrancing and disturbing . . . [Demick] is one of our finest chroniclers of East Asia. . . . [Her] characters are richly drawn, and her stories, often reported over a span of years, deliver a rare emotional wallop.”—The New York Times

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"Barbara Demick gets into the heads and the hearts of the people she profiles so adeptly that one sometimes forgets it is nonfiction one is reading. In Daughters of the Bamboo Grove, she turns the seemingly-prosaic human dramas of our societies into a cinematic and heart-rending epic tale with consequences that cross continents. In her work, every individual’s story gets their due - its beauty, dignity, and wonder made evident through her writing."

— Emily Feng, author of Let Only Red Flowers Bloom

Quotes

  • This powerful book documents the heart-wrenching impact of China’s Family Planning policy, particularly the forced separations that fueled international adoptions. Focusing on the lives of twins cruelly separated in infancy—one remaining in China and the other raised overseas by adoptive parents—this immensely empathetic, moving, and thought-provoking narrative offers readers an extraordinary window into the complex dilemmas of international adoption.

    — Zhuqing Li, author of Daughters of the Flower Fragrant Garden
  • A bittersweet but engrossing narrative of how one family was compelled by Beijing’s ‘one-child policy’ to give an ‘unauthorized’ child up for adoption to American parents.

    — Orville Schell, co-author of Wealth and Power
  • Barbara Demick gets into the heads and the hearts of the people she profiles so adeptly that one sometimes forgets it is nonfiction one is reading. In Daughters of the Bamboo Grove, she turns the seemingly-prosaic human dramas of our societies into a cinematic and heart-rending epic tale with consequences that cross continents. In her work, every individual’s story gets their due—its beauty, dignity, and wonder made evident through her writing.

    — Emily Feng, author of Let Only Red Flowers Bloom
  • This book is resounding proof that nobody can understand China without reading Barbara Demick, because she unearths stories the government wants buried. She writes with such humanity and literary grace that this envelops you like a novel in which every word is true.

    — Evan Osnos, National Book Award–winning author of Age of Ambition
  • A family torn apart struggles to heal itself in this immersive, painterly exposé. . . . The Zeng family’s efforts to reconnect years later frame Demick’s investigation into how China’s ‘one child policy’ dovetailed with an ‘insatiable demand’ for international adoptees in America. . . . Demick relays this nightmarish tale in elegant, empathetic prose. It’s a tour de force.

    — Publishers Weekly, starred review
  • In this appalling exposé, longtime China correspondent for the Los Angeles Times and investigative journalist Demick . . . tells [vulnerable families’] stories with amazing levels of detail, nuance, empathy, and grace. She includes meticulous documentation and offers unique insights into life in rural China from the Maoist regime to the present day.

    — Booklist, starred review
  • Brilliantly written with passion and forensic detail, the book reads like a fast-paced whodunit, with the crime committed against a nation, a people, and girls everywhere.

    — Mei Fong, author of One Child
  • Award-winning journalist Barbara Demick has created an informative, sometimes heart-wrenching, sometimes uplifting story of China’s one-child policy and transnational adoption.

    — Lisa See, New York Times bestselling author of Lady Tan’s Circle of Women
  • Barbara Demick gets into the heads and the hearts of the people she profiles so adeptly that one sometimes forgets it is nonfiction one is reading. . . .a cinematic and heart-rending epic tale with consequences that cross continents.

    — Emily Feng, author of Let Only Red Flowers Bloom
  • This powerful book documents the heart-wrenching impact of China’s Family Planning policy, particularly the forced separations that fueled international adoptions . . . this immensely empathetic, moving, and thought-provoking narrative offers readers an extraordinary window into the complex dilemmas of international adoption.

    — Zhuqing Li, author of Daughters of the Flower Fragrant Garden
  • An unsparing, impeccably reported yet deeply compassionate account of the devastating consequences when China’s ‘one child’ policy led to children being snatched from loving families for profit . . . a story of heartbreak, shame, separation, and irreparable damage—but, most of all, love.

    — Tania Branigan, author of Red Memory
  • Solid reportage and a deep knowledge of China inform this welcome study of a state-imposed social experiment gone awry.

    — Kirkus Reviews

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About Barbara Demick

Barbara Demick is the author of Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea, which was a finalist for the National Book Award and National Book Critics Circle Award and the winner of the Samuel Johnson Prize in the United Kingdom, and Logavina Street: Life and Death in a Sarajevo Neighborhood. Her books have been translated into more than twenty-five languages. She is a staff writer for the Los Angeles Times and a contributor to the New Yorker and was recently a press fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

About Joy Osmanski

Joy Osmanski, theater, television, and film actress, is an award-winning audiobook narrator who has won three AudioFile Earphones Awards. She graduated from Principia College with a degree in creative writing and received her MFA from UC San Diego.