|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
|
Barefoot Doctor - A Novel
Can Xue; Translated by Karen Gernant, Zeping Chen
|
R525
R386
Discovery Miles 3 860
Save R139 (26%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
A profound, poignant story of a village healer and her community,
from one of the world’s great contemporary novelists  “A
complex and illuminating portrait of a group of healers in China .
. . [that] offers profound insights about what it means to pursue
and live a fulfilling life.”—Publishers Weekly  “A
barefoot doctor herself, [Can Xue] has a unique and powerful way of
transporting readers to new worlds where reality and magic are
intertwined, and she uses her own experiences to make this novel
feel more personal.”—Emily Park, Booklist  In rural Yun
Village, herbalist Mrs. Yi lives with her husband in a cottage at
the foot of Niulan Mountain, where she gathers herbs to treat the
ailments of the villagers by day and studies medicine by night.
Sickness and herbs are lovers, she tells her patients, rejoicing
when they recover, comforting them when they do not. All the while,
she hopes to find a worthy successor to take up her mantle. As
curious younger villagers observe Mrs. Yi and begin imitating her
work—planting gardens and studying the art of healing—they soon
discover that the line dividing life from death is porous, and the
mountain is more mysterious than they ever knew. Â Drawing on
her experiences as a barefoot doctor in her youth, Can Xue returns
with a transporting novel that alights in the in-between spaces:
between the living and the dead, healer and sick, nature and us.
The first full-length novel by Chinese author Can Xue to appear in
English Five Spice Street tells the story of a street in an unnamed
city whose inhabitants speculate on the life of a mysterious Madam
X. The novel interweaves their endless suppositions into a work
that is at once political parable and surreal fantasia. Some think
X is 50 years old; others that she is 22. Some believe she has
occult powers and has thereby enslaved the young men of the street;
others think she is a clever trickster playing mind games with the
common people. Who is Madam X? How has she brought the good people
of Five Spice Street to their knees either in worship or in
exasperation? The unknown narrator takes no sides in the endless
interplay of visions, arguments, and opinions. The investigation
rages, as the street becomes a Walpurgisnacht of speculations,
fantasies, and prejudices. Madam X is a vehicle whereby the people
bare their souls, through whom they reveal themselves even as they
try to penetrate the mystery of her extraordinary powers. Five
Spice Street is one of the most astonishing novels of the past
twenty years. Exploring the collective consciousness of this little
street of ordinary people, Can Xue penetrates the deepest
existential anxieties of the present day-whether in China or in the
West-where the inevitable impermanence of identity struggles with
the narrative within which identity must compose itself.
The stories collected here illuminate two recent phenomena in
China. The first migration-the "up to the mountains, down to the
villages" movement of the late 1960s to 1970s, where approximately
twelve to fourteen million educated urban youth left the cities to
work on farms, and the large voluntary migration since the 1990s of
tens of millions of peasants into the cities.
The stories collected here illuminate two recent phenomena in
China. The first migration-the "up to the mountains, down to the
villages" movement of the late 1960s to 1970s, where approximately
twelve to fourteen million educated urban youth left the cities to
work on farms, and the large voluntary migration since the 1990s of
tens of millions of peasants into the cities.
A major new collection of stories by one of the most exciting and
creative voices in contemporary Chinese literature Can Xue's
stories observe no obvious conventions of plot or characterization.
That is the only rule they follow. Instead, they tend to limn a
disordered and poetic state given structure by philosophical wonder
and emotional rigor. Combining elements of both Chinese
materiality-the love of physical things-and Western abstract
thinking, Can Xue invites her readers into an immersive landscape
that blends empirical fact and illusion, mixes the physical and
spiritual, and probes the space between consciousness and oblivion.
She brings us to a place that is both readily familiar yet
unmappable and can make us hyperaware of the inherent unreliability
in our relationship to the world around us. Delightful, enchanting,
and filled with secrets, Can Xue's newest collection shines a light
on the forces that give contours to the visible terrain we
acknowledge as reality.
A selection of harsh, sometimes violent, and often surreal stories
by the premier young avant-garde Chinese woman writer.
A couple moves with their young daughter to the seaside, only to be
terrorized by hostile townsfolk, predatory seabirds, and the
persistent sound of the waves. Two old friends spend their waning
days traipsing amongst ruined walls, imagining bubbling brooks and
lush marshland. An old man lives atop a bizarre wooden building in
the clouds, where he is served pancakes by a hostile youth.
These are the scenarios of just some of the stories in this
generous new collection by Can Xue. Although rooted in the folk
traditions of Chinese literature and the real conflicts of
contemporary Chinese life, Can Xue's stories exist in a separate
space and time where dreams and reality coalesce: tenderness
quickly turns to violence, strange diseases are caught, and quaint
landscapes become phantasmagorical. Can Xue's literary world is
inhabited by ghosts, dying old men, street urchins, cobblers,
farmers, cats, rats, and stray dogs. Much influenced by Borges,
Kafka, and Bruno Schulz, this new collection of Can Xue's surreal
stories confirms "The New York Times'" assessment that "reading Can
Xue's fiction is like running downhill in the dark; you've got
momentum, but you don't know where you're headed."
|
Frontier (Paperback)
Can Xue; Translated by Karen Gernant, Chen Zeping
|
R475
R418
Discovery Miles 4 180
Save R57 (12%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
|