Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet

Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet

by

Jamie Ford

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet makes teaching easy.

Henry Lee Character Analysis

The novel’s protagonist. At twelve, Henry is quiet and strong. As the only Chinese student at his all-white school growing up during World War II, Henry deals with constant bullying from students like Chaz Preston. Henry struggles to fit in both at school and at home, where his parents, particularly his father, have rigid expectations about how he will live his life. Henry is good friends with Sheldon Thomas, but he does not feel deeply emotionally connected with anyone else in his life until he meets Keiko Okabe. With Keiko, Henry finally feels at home, and his beliefs about what it means to be “American” begin to become more developed and nuanced. His whole life, Henry struggles in his relationship to his father. Henry blames himself for the stroke that ultimately kills his father, and the two are estranged at the time of Henry’s father’s death. Still, as an adult, Henry does his best to create a better relationship with his son, Marty, than the one he had with his father. Henry is not naturally good at communicating his feelings as an adult, since he has repressed much of what happened in his childhood in order to focus on building a life with his wife, Ethel. Over the course of the novel, Henry allows the love he has always harbored for Keiko to resurface, and begins to openly discuss his past in a way he never has before. Ultimately, Marty and Samantha, his fiancée, locate and contact Keiko, who is now living in New York City. Henry flies to New York to reunite with Keiko; upon seeing one another, the two emotionally reconnect as if no time has passed, showing how resilient true love is.

Henry Lee Quotes in Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet

The Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet quotes below are all either spoken by Henry Lee or refer to Henry Lee. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Belonging, Bigotry, and Identity Theme Icon
).
Marty Lee (1986) Quotes

Henry kept staring at the photo albums, faded reminders of his own school days, looking for someone he’d never find. I try not to live in the past, he thought, but who knows, sometimes the past lives in me.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:
Flag Duty (1942) Quotes

“‘I am Chinese,’” Chaz read out loud. “It don’t make no difference to me, shrimp, you still don’t celebrate Christmas, do you?”

[…]

“Ho, ho, ho,” Henry replied. […] We do celebrate Christmas, along with Cheun Jit, the lunar new year. But no, Pearl Harbor Day is not a festive occasion.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Chaz Preston (speaker)
Related Symbols: Henry’s “I Am Chinese” Button
Page Number: 18
Explanation and Analysis:
Nihonmachi (1942) Quotes

“I. Don’t. Speak. Japanese.” Keiko burst out laughing. “They don’t even teach it anymore at the Japanese school. They stopped last fall. My mom and dad speak it, but they wanted me to learn only English. About the only Japanese I know is wakarimasen […] It means ‘I don’t understand’—understand?”

Related Characters: Keiko Okabe (speaker), Henry Lee
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:
Speak Your American (1942) Quotes

He listened to his father during these lopsided, one-way conversations, but he never talked back. In fact, Henry rarely talked at all, except in English to acknowledge his advancing skills. But since his father understood only Cantonese and a little Mandarin, the conversations came as waves, back and forth, tidal shores of separate oceans.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 46
Explanation and Analysis:

“Why do you like jazz so much?” Keiko asked.

“I don’t know,” Henry said. […] “Maybe because it’s so different, but people everywhere still like it, they just accept musicians, no matter what color they are. Plus, my father hates it.”

“Why does he hate it?”

“Because it’s too different, I guess.”

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe (speaker), Henry’s Father
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:
Executive Orders (1942) Quotes

His father had devoted most of his life to nationalist causes, all aimed at furthering the Three People’s Principles proclaimed by the late Chinese president. […] as Henry grasped the point of his father’s enthusiasm in these small local conflicts with Japanese Americans, it was mixed with a fair amount of confusion and contradiction. Father believed in a government of the people but was wary of who those people were.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 68
Explanation and Analysis:
Ume (1986) Quotes

But more than that, Henry hated being compared with his own father. In Marty’s eyes, the plum hadn’t fallen far from the tree; if anything, it was clinging stubbornly to the branches. That’s what I’ve taught him by my example, Henry thought.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father, Marty Lee
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:
Downhill (1942) Quotes

“I told you he was a Jap on the inside!”

Henry knew the voice. Turning around, he saw Chaz. Crowbar in one hand, and a wadded-up poster of an American flag in his other. A different kind of flag duty, Henry thought. The wooden door behind Chaz had long gashes where he’d scraped the poster off.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Chaz Preston (speaker)
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
Records (1942) Quotes

Henry had been given dirty looks before but he’d never experienced something like this. He’d heard about things like this in the South. Places like Arkansas or Alabama, but not Seattle. Not the Pacific Northwest.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Keiko Okabe
Page Number: 114
Explanation and Analysis:
Parents (1942) Quotes

The other children, and even the teachers, seemed unaware of the Japanese exodus from Bainbridge Island. The day had come and gone in relative quiet. Almost like it never happened. Lost in the news of the war—that the U.S. and Filipino troops were losing at Bataan and that a Japanese submarine had shelled an oil refinery somewhere in California.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 119-120
Explanation and Analysis:

“I can be Chinese too,” she teased him, pointing at Henry’s button. “Hou noi mou gin.” It meant “How are you today, beautiful?” in Cantonese.

“Where did you learn that?”

[…] “I looked it up at the library.”

Oai deki te ureshii desu,” Henry returned.

For an awkward moment, they just looked at each other, beaming, not knowing what to say, or in which language to say it.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe (speaker)
Related Symbols: Henry’s “I Am Chinese” Button
Page Number: 121
Explanation and Analysis:
Better Them Than Us (1942) Quotes

There was a mix of crying toddlers, shuffling suitcases, and soldiers checking the paperwork of local citizens—most of whom were dressed in their Sunday best, the one or two suitcases they were allowed packed to the point of bursting. Each person wore a plain white tag, the kind you’d see on a piece of furniture, dangling down from a coat button.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 128-9
Explanation and Analysis:
Empty Streets (1942) Quotes

“What if they send them back to Japan? Keiko doesn’t even speak Japanese. What’ll happen to her? She’s more of an enemy there than she is here.”

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe, Sheldon Thomas
Page Number: 137
Explanation and Analysis:
Visiting Hours (1942) Quotes

[The soldiers] were busy arguing with a pair of women from a local Baptist church who were trying to deliver a Japanese Bible to an elderly internee. […]

“Nothing printed in Japanese is allowed!” one of the soldiers argued.

[…]

“If I can’t read it in God’s plain English, it ain’t coming into the camp,” Henry overheard one of the soldiers say.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 162
Explanation and Analysis:
Home Again (1942) Quotes

It made Keiko’s situation, while bleak, seem so much more appealing. Henry caught himself feeling a twinge of jealousy. At least she was with her family. For now anyway. At least they understood. At least they wouldn’t send her away.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Keiko Okabe, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:
Camp Anyway (1942) Quotes

“[My father]’s disowned me. My parents stopped speaking to me this week. But my mother still sort of acts like I’m around.” The words came out so casually, even Henry was surprised at how normal it felt. But communication in his home had been far from ordinary for almost a year; this was just a new, final wrinkle.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe, Henry’s Father, Henry’s Mother
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

Through the slosh of the rain, Henry heard music from the camp. The song grew louder and louder, straining the limits of the speakers it came from. It was the record. Their record. Oscar Holden’s “Alley Cat Strut.” Henry could almost pick out Sheldon’s part. It shouted at the night. Louder than the storm.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe, Sheldon Thomas, Oscar Holden
Related Symbols: The Oscar Holden Record
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:
V-J Day (1945) Quotes

He’d wondered what his father would do to occupy his time now that the Japanese had surrendered. Then again, he knew the war would go on in his father’s mind. This time it would be the Kuomintang, the nationalists versus the communists. China’s struggle would continue, and so would his father’s.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 260
Explanation and Analysis:
New York (1986) Quotes

Standing in front of him was a woman in her fifties, her hair shorter than he remembered […] Her chestnut brown eyes, despite the lifetime she wore in the lovely lines of her face, shone as clear and fluid as ever.

The same eyes that had looked inside him all those years ago. Hopeful eyes.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Keiko Okabe
Page Number: 283-4
Explanation and Analysis:
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Henry Lee Quotes in Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet

The Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet quotes below are all either spoken by Henry Lee or refer to Henry Lee. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Belonging, Bigotry, and Identity Theme Icon
).
Marty Lee (1986) Quotes

Henry kept staring at the photo albums, faded reminders of his own school days, looking for someone he’d never find. I try not to live in the past, he thought, but who knows, sometimes the past lives in me.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:
Flag Duty (1942) Quotes

“‘I am Chinese,’” Chaz read out loud. “It don’t make no difference to me, shrimp, you still don’t celebrate Christmas, do you?”

[…]

“Ho, ho, ho,” Henry replied. […] We do celebrate Christmas, along with Cheun Jit, the lunar new year. But no, Pearl Harbor Day is not a festive occasion.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Chaz Preston (speaker)
Related Symbols: Henry’s “I Am Chinese” Button
Page Number: 18
Explanation and Analysis:
Nihonmachi (1942) Quotes

“I. Don’t. Speak. Japanese.” Keiko burst out laughing. “They don’t even teach it anymore at the Japanese school. They stopped last fall. My mom and dad speak it, but they wanted me to learn only English. About the only Japanese I know is wakarimasen […] It means ‘I don’t understand’—understand?”

Related Characters: Keiko Okabe (speaker), Henry Lee
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:
Speak Your American (1942) Quotes

He listened to his father during these lopsided, one-way conversations, but he never talked back. In fact, Henry rarely talked at all, except in English to acknowledge his advancing skills. But since his father understood only Cantonese and a little Mandarin, the conversations came as waves, back and forth, tidal shores of separate oceans.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 46
Explanation and Analysis:

“Why do you like jazz so much?” Keiko asked.

“I don’t know,” Henry said. […] “Maybe because it’s so different, but people everywhere still like it, they just accept musicians, no matter what color they are. Plus, my father hates it.”

“Why does he hate it?”

“Because it’s too different, I guess.”

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe (speaker), Henry’s Father
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:
Executive Orders (1942) Quotes

His father had devoted most of his life to nationalist causes, all aimed at furthering the Three People’s Principles proclaimed by the late Chinese president. […] as Henry grasped the point of his father’s enthusiasm in these small local conflicts with Japanese Americans, it was mixed with a fair amount of confusion and contradiction. Father believed in a government of the people but was wary of who those people were.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 68
Explanation and Analysis:
Ume (1986) Quotes

But more than that, Henry hated being compared with his own father. In Marty’s eyes, the plum hadn’t fallen far from the tree; if anything, it was clinging stubbornly to the branches. That’s what I’ve taught him by my example, Henry thought.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father, Marty Lee
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:
Downhill (1942) Quotes

“I told you he was a Jap on the inside!”

Henry knew the voice. Turning around, he saw Chaz. Crowbar in one hand, and a wadded-up poster of an American flag in his other. A different kind of flag duty, Henry thought. The wooden door behind Chaz had long gashes where he’d scraped the poster off.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Chaz Preston (speaker)
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
Records (1942) Quotes

Henry had been given dirty looks before but he’d never experienced something like this. He’d heard about things like this in the South. Places like Arkansas or Alabama, but not Seattle. Not the Pacific Northwest.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Keiko Okabe
Page Number: 114
Explanation and Analysis:
Parents (1942) Quotes

The other children, and even the teachers, seemed unaware of the Japanese exodus from Bainbridge Island. The day had come and gone in relative quiet. Almost like it never happened. Lost in the news of the war—that the U.S. and Filipino troops were losing at Bataan and that a Japanese submarine had shelled an oil refinery somewhere in California.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 119-120
Explanation and Analysis:

“I can be Chinese too,” she teased him, pointing at Henry’s button. “Hou noi mou gin.” It meant “How are you today, beautiful?” in Cantonese.

“Where did you learn that?”

[…] “I looked it up at the library.”

Oai deki te ureshii desu,” Henry returned.

For an awkward moment, they just looked at each other, beaming, not knowing what to say, or in which language to say it.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe (speaker)
Related Symbols: Henry’s “I Am Chinese” Button
Page Number: 121
Explanation and Analysis:
Better Them Than Us (1942) Quotes

There was a mix of crying toddlers, shuffling suitcases, and soldiers checking the paperwork of local citizens—most of whom were dressed in their Sunday best, the one or two suitcases they were allowed packed to the point of bursting. Each person wore a plain white tag, the kind you’d see on a piece of furniture, dangling down from a coat button.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 128-9
Explanation and Analysis:
Empty Streets (1942) Quotes

“What if they send them back to Japan? Keiko doesn’t even speak Japanese. What’ll happen to her? She’s more of an enemy there than she is here.”

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe, Sheldon Thomas
Page Number: 137
Explanation and Analysis:
Visiting Hours (1942) Quotes

[The soldiers] were busy arguing with a pair of women from a local Baptist church who were trying to deliver a Japanese Bible to an elderly internee. […]

“Nothing printed in Japanese is allowed!” one of the soldiers argued.

[…]

“If I can’t read it in God’s plain English, it ain’t coming into the camp,” Henry overheard one of the soldiers say.

Related Characters: Henry Lee
Page Number: 162
Explanation and Analysis:
Home Again (1942) Quotes

It made Keiko’s situation, while bleak, seem so much more appealing. Henry caught himself feeling a twinge of jealousy. At least she was with her family. For now anyway. At least they understood. At least they wouldn’t send her away.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Keiko Okabe, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:
Camp Anyway (1942) Quotes

“[My father]’s disowned me. My parents stopped speaking to me this week. But my mother still sort of acts like I’m around.” The words came out so casually, even Henry was surprised at how normal it felt. But communication in his home had been far from ordinary for almost a year; this was just a new, final wrinkle.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe, Henry’s Father, Henry’s Mother
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

Through the slosh of the rain, Henry heard music from the camp. The song grew louder and louder, straining the limits of the speakers it came from. It was the record. Their record. Oscar Holden’s “Alley Cat Strut.” Henry could almost pick out Sheldon’s part. It shouted at the night. Louder than the storm.

Related Characters: Henry Lee (speaker), Keiko Okabe, Sheldon Thomas, Oscar Holden
Related Symbols: The Oscar Holden Record
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:
V-J Day (1945) Quotes

He’d wondered what his father would do to occupy his time now that the Japanese had surrendered. Then again, he knew the war would go on in his father’s mind. This time it would be the Kuomintang, the nationalists versus the communists. China’s struggle would continue, and so would his father’s.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Henry’s Father
Page Number: 260
Explanation and Analysis:
New York (1986) Quotes

Standing in front of him was a woman in her fifties, her hair shorter than he remembered […] Her chestnut brown eyes, despite the lifetime she wore in the lovely lines of her face, shone as clear and fluid as ever.

The same eyes that had looked inside him all those years ago. Hopeful eyes.

Related Characters: Henry Lee, Keiko Okabe
Page Number: 283-4
Explanation and Analysis: