China Rich Girlfriend by Kevin Kwan, blends lifestyle p0rn and careful attentions to customs and manners of an Edith Wharton or Candace Bushnell adventure, only set among the hyperwealthy Chinese, instead of hyperwealthy New Yorkers. So, the correct designers outfits are worn to the correct private jewelry showings, but instead of getting a summer house in the wrong side of the Hamptons, new money characters make their New Year’s visits in the wrong order. So good, you guys.
This would be a really fun read, if only for the travelogue and lifestyle porn aspects, but you guys, there is so much snark in this novel. There’s occasional Hokkien and Cantonese insults and snark, with the translation in even snarkier footnotes. When social consultant Corinna Ko-Tung agrees to reinvent Kitty Pong, a reality star with high-class aspirations, she gives her an assignment list of some of my favorite manners novels, with hilariously harsh commentary on how to learn from them.
At one point, Collette Bing, heiress and Instagram celebrity, spontaneously flies her friends (and her friends’ personal maids, of course) by carefully decorated private jet to Paris. Most of the friends in question treat this as though a friend dropped by the office with a surprise latte, not that anyone here works an office job. In another scene, gossiping aunties discuss who has been tragically disinherited and left with mere millions. And a young wife wonders if her hyperrich father might have deliberately overvalued and then secretly bought out her husband’s tech startup, in order to give his son-in-law some independence.
The story took a little while to get going, but don’t skim the names of party guests or skip who gave who a meaningful glance, and definitely don’t lose track of which characters are cousins. This is all vitally important information.
Rachel and Nick’s romance was covered in Crazy Rich Asians, but I hadn’t actually read Kwan’s first novel, when I got this ARC and first read this book. (Yes, this was years before the movie.) It’s easy enough to follow as a standalone, but don’t skip reading Crazy Rich Asians! At the beginning of the book, Nick has defied his wealthy and connected family to marry Rachel, an American-born college professor, who doesn’t have a famous name or even a father’s name. But it turns out that Rachel bears a striking resemblance to another Hong Kong patriarch, and she might have a pedigree after all. There were several story arcs, with so many great characters, leading to a really delightful ending where all our star-crossed lovers get to be together, including a perfect secret boyfriend for Kitty Pong. But a pretty major question has been left unresolved, because we never really find out if Nick will be reinstated as the heir to his family’s fortune after marrying someone outside the circle. Maybe that means a third romp through the social lives of hyperrich Asian families is coming?
[…] I love Crazy Rich Asians, China Rich Girlfriend, and Rich People Problems, so I’m excited to see the movie. The trailer makes it look more […]
[…] so I requested all of the books Corinna Ko-Tung tells Kitty Pong to read (in China Rich Girlfriend) from the […]
I really enjoyed this second installment in the Crazy Rich Asians series!! There was so much snark and opulence, and I loved absolutely every minute of it.
China Rich Girlfriend was definitely a sharp departure from Crazy Rich Asians, but the new characters in the story made it even more delightful, it and motivated me to finish the trilogy.
Have you read Rich People Problems? I think it really is a great ending to the entire story.
Katisha @ Reel Literature recently posted…LIT GETS REEL: AUGUST 2019 ADAPTATIONS
Yes! I liked it a lot https://www.thefictionaddiction.com/rich-people-problems/
I thought it was a little over the top, but a fitting end to the trilogy.
[…] Mostly, this didn’t work for me because there was nothing aspirational about these influencers. They weren’t passionate about makeup or photography or community or really anything. The girls were famous for being famous, and even the secretly-tortured side didn’t work because there was nothing particularly bad about being Instagram famous. Give me Collette Bing any day! […]
[…] The first in this trilogy is a hilarious manners novel, with a love story. The next two books, China Rich Girlfriend, and Rich People Problems, continue the story of the Young, T’sien, and Shang family, along […]
[…] British novels call “like-minded people”. (See also: Julian Fellowes’ Snobs, Kevin Kwan’s China Rich Girlfriend, and Candace Bushnell’s One Fifth Avenue.) Everybody Rise has both, with long descriptions of a […]
[…] I’d only read The Secret History before, but I loved that one. So, just like I did reading China Rich Girlfriend, when Corinne recommends the top manners novels to Kitty Pong, and I immediately requested all the […]
[…] and with a little more nuance, this could have lived up to that appealing “Gossip Girl meets Crazy Rich Asians” tagline. I got signs of intriguing relationships and complex situations in this world, but […]
[…] I requested all of the books Corinna Ko-Tung tells Kitty Pong to read (in China Rich Girlfriend) from the library, for my 白穷美 […]
[…] thought the premise of Kyla Zhao’s The Fraud Squad sounded amazing. I love Gossip Girl and Crazy Rich Asians, and the idea of socialite friends reinventing a working-class girl had fun My Fair Lady vibes, […]