Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Staff Picks: Daughters of the Bamboo Grove by Barbara Demick

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

Book cover of "Daughters of the Bamboo Grove" by Barbara Demick features a photo of a Chinese girl walking through a yellow field.
One of my ongoing reading goals is to read a book from or about a different country. When I saw Daughters of the Bamboo Grove on the New Nonfiction eAudio list on Libby, I was immediately intrigued. I knew little about modern Chinese history before picking up this book and I had heard stories about China’s one-child policy, mostly about infant girls being left on streets because parents would rather have a son. Little did I know there was so much more to learn about this “social experiment.”

Barbara Demick is an American journalist who was the bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times in Beijing and Seoul and has written additional nonfiction books about modern Asia. Her latest book, Daughters of the Bamboo Grove, gives a humanistic and eye-opening view of China’s one-child policy which lasted from 1979 to 2015. Telling a different side from what most Westerners have heard about China, Demick writes of how thousands of these Chinese babies were kidnapped from their families in broad daylight then marketed as “orphans” or “abandoned” due to the increasing demand of international families and couples looking to adopt.

The book can be divided into three sections. In the first few chapters, Demick recounts the history and execution of the controversial social policy and the consequences we are already seeing today. The middle section is Demick’s own story about her journey investigating these “abandoned” children, recording first-hand accounts from the families, or victims, most of whom are from the Hunan Province in southern China. Throughout the whole book, Demick follows the story of a family from Hunan who had twin girls in 2000 with one of the infants being kidnapped, put up for adoption under false pretenses, and was soon adopted by an American couple. The last third of the book details Demick’s personal journey of reuniting the kidnapped twin with her birth family who never gave up searching for their daughter. She closes the book with a look at how China is currently handling the consequences of their “social experiment” in the rapid decrease of their population and how technology has made it easier for adoptees to find their biological parents.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in modern Chinese history and social customs, and about the operations and outcomes of international adoptions.

If you don’t have time for the 330-something page book, read  Demick’s Los Angeles Times article about the reunion of the twin girls in 2019 when they were 16-years-old. Demick also wrote an article for The New Yorker about China’s stolen adoptees discovering their true origins.

Fiction Readalikes

Nonfiction Readalikes


Jessica Dillard
Information Specialist
Denmark Library

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