One Daughter's Lantern is a memoir of three generations of women navigating love, loss, and independence in a changing China. It follows a grandmother who endured famine, war, and rigid tradition; a mother who resisted inherited expectations while forging financial and personal independence amid the constraints of the One-Child Policy; and a daughter who inherits these legacies while building her life in America.
Moving across rural villages, growing cities, and continents, the book explores how policy enters the private sphere of family, shaping marriage, motherhood, secrecy, and sacrifice. At its heart, this is a story about women who do not simply survive history, but quietly transform it.
Under the shadow of the decree-"You can only have one child"-and told through the ritual of making mugwort rice patties, One Daughter's Lantern reveals how love is carried through resilience, how history enters the home, and how women bear what cannot be spoken. It is a story of inheritance and migration, of quiet endurance, and of finding strength in the past while carrying its light forward.
Both intimate and expansive, this memoir speaks to readers interested in modern Chinese history, women's lives under the One-Child Policy, migration and diaspora, and the enduring bond between mothers and daughters.