Lisa See is the author of the new novel Daughters of the Sun and Moon. Her many other books include Lady Tan's Circle of Women. She lives in Los Angeles.
Q: Why did you decide to highlight the Chinese Massacre of 1871 in your new novel?
A: I have long been inspired by history that’s been lost, forgotten, or deliberately covered up. With this story, I found multiple layers of lost and forgotten history.
It’s hard to imagine the Los Angeles of today as it was back in 1870. The state of California was just 18 years old, the Civil War had ended five years earlier, and the transcontinental railroad had just been completed. People were coming to California from all points of the compass, and they were a rough and tumble lot.
We tend to think of Tombstone, Dodge City, and Deadwood as the wildest of the Wild West towns, but Los Angeles was, by every measure, the most brutal and violent, with a murder rate three times that of New York City and double that of the country at large. Who knew?
Los Angeles was home to a little over 5,000 residents, of whom 145 were Chinese men and 34 were Chinese women. What must those women have thought about being in this tiny, dirty, violent place?
On October 24, 1871, only 10 days after the great Chicago fire, one-tenth of the population—over 500 Angelenos—rioted against the Chinese. By the end of the evening, one tenth of the Chinese population—18 men and boys—had been shot, stabbed, mutilated, and then hung for good measure.
The Chinese Massacre of 1871—the so-called Night of Horrors—is considered to be one of the largest mass lynchings in the history of the United States and certainly the largest in California.
And boy oh boy, do the events of that night fit exactly with what I care about—history that’s been lost, forgotten, or deliberately covered up. In Daughters of the Sun and Moon, I wanted to write about the events of 1870-71 but from the perspective of the Chinese women who were here.
Q: Your characters Moon, Petal, and Dove were based in part on historical figures. How did you research their stories, and what did you learn that particularly surprised you?
A: Dove was inspired by a young woman, whose name in real life was Yut Ho. I found much of her story in newspaper accounts and in the surviving trial documents related to the 1871 Massacre, most of which are held in the Huntington Library’s collection.
Yut Ho was brought here in an arranged marriage to a much older merchant, who the press described as being “hideously ugly.” She wasn’t here for very long before she was kidnapped and held captive for many months.
Reporters at the time and scholars even today believe her kidnapping was the initial spark for what would come to be known as the Night of Horrors. I think of her as the Helen of Troy of the piece.
Petal is actually a composite of two women—Sing Ye and Sing Yu—who were sold by their families in China, brought here, and sold into prostitution. From the moment they got here, both women did everything they could to escape and find freedom. I found accounts of their escapes, and in one case kidnapping, in the local press of the day and in surviving court documents.
Tong Yu was Doctor Chee Long “Gene” Tong’s wife and the inspiration for Moon. After her husband’s death during the Night of Horrors, she became one of the earliest Chinese women in the country to file a lawsuit. It was against the gang leader she held responsible for the massacre and her husband’s murder. But nothing came of it.
Or perhaps I should say that there’s nothing left in the historic record to show what happened. I kept thinking about that absence and what it might mean…
I guess what surprised me most is that these real women each made a short appearance in the press—what we might call their 15 minutes of fame—and then they disappeared from the historic record. Their “disappearance,” while not all that surprising as 15 minutes of fame disappear even today, is what inspired me.
Q: How was the novel’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?
A: I’ve seen one reference to Chinese prostitutes being called “daughters of the sun and moon.” But only the one reference! Still, I kept thinking about the description and what it might say about women in general, Chinese women in particular, and the women in the novel most specifically.
Moon, Dove, and Petal are very different from each other—by class, by their ability to read or not, by the size and shape of their feet, by marriage status, by whether they are free or not. They are as different as can be from each other, yet they are connected as women.
I believe this is true for all women around the world. We may look different, practice different religions, live in very different cultures, and yet we are bound by our shared female biology and anatomy, our shared desire to be loved, and our shared need to survive and endure.
Q: Do you see parallels between the events in your novel and our world today?
A: I started working on Daughters of the Sun and Moon long before the ICE raids that have disrupted communities, including my own, but discrimination, racism, and violence are nothing new.
I hope readers will think about what was happening to the Chinese in America in the 19th century and more specifically during the Night of Horrors in Los Angeles and how those events relate to what many immigrants are experiencing today in this country. Can we learn from our mistakes or are we doomed to repeat them?
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m still in the very early stages of research, so the story could still change a lot, depending on what I find.
I can tell you a bit about my initial inspiration, which is a Chinese lute called Xiao Hulei—Little Thunder—which was made in 781, passed through many hands, and is now in the collection at the Palace Museum in the Forbidden City.
This final home—rather, I should say a return to its original home in the palace—inspired me to think about the history of the Palace Museum and what happened to the collection and the curators during the Cultural Revolution.
Beautiful Flower and Little Thunder (working title) will weave together two parallel stories of love, separation, isolation, survival, and reunion.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Each time we’ve done interviews together, I’ve always been struck by this last question. It always reminds me of your dad and what a great journalist he is. And now you too!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Lisa See.












