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Winner of the Mao Dun Literature Prize. From one of China's most
celebrated authors comes a masterful novel about modernity and
tradition, love and obsession, and economic change and quixotic
dreams-all set against the backdrop of a rapidly urbanizing China.
In post-Cultural Revolution China, in the fading village of
Freshwind, the fates of two households are shifting. The Bais, once
the most powerful family in the region, have fallen from status.
Their beautiful daughter, Snow Bai, an embodiment of tradition,
pursues a career in a vanishing art form. The Xias, enthusiastic
members of the Party, are on the rise. Their favorite son, Wind
Xia, is a citified politician whose marriage to Snow Bai could
unite the two families. But in a village casting about for a new
road to prosperity, fortunes can change. Watching it all unfold is
a local outcast named Spark. The inveterate busybody is given to
strange visions and flights of fancy, and is motivated by the only
constant in Freshwind: his mad love for Snow Bai. Expansive, funny,
monumental, and deeply poignant, Jia Pingwa's The Shaanxi Opera is
a keenly observant portrait of China in an era of globalization,
societal upheaval, and the growing influence of popular culture.
This text had a major impact in its original Chinese version.
Reviewed in the Far East Economic Review as 'one of the richest
portraits of the Chinese countryside published in the reform era',
it charts a long journey through the hinterland region of the
Yellow River undertaken by the author between 1994 and 1996. It
examines in exhaustive detail the lives and work of peasants, Party
and local government officials, providing a wealth of data on the
nature of life in post-reform rural China. The author argues that
global integration is but the latest 'great leap forward' in a
succession of reforms over a hundred years.
This text had a major impact in its original Chinese version.
Reviewed in the Far East Economic Review as 'one of the richest
portraits of the Chinese countryside published in the reform era',
the book charts a long journey through the hinterland region of the
Yellow River undertaken by the author between 1994 and 1996. It
examines in exhaustive detail the lives and work of peasants, Party
and local government officials, providing a wealth of data on the
nature of life in post-reform rural China. The author argues that
global integration is but the latest 'great leap forward' in a
succession of periodic reforms going back over a hundred years,
that in every case it is China's farmers who bear the brunt of the
changes, that in the past they have always rebelled, and, he
predicts, they will do so again.
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Broken Wings (Paperback)
Jia Pingwa; Translated by Nicky Harman
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R342
R277
Discovery Miles 2 770
Save R65 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A thrilling journey through China's dark criminal underworld, from
a celebrated voice in Chinese literature When Hongyang is found
dead after a night of debauched drinking, it looks as if his reign
of terror has finally come to an end. Few in this insular community
have much reason to mourn his passing: Hongyang is an infamous mob
boss, a man with plenty of enemies. But now it seems that his years
of crime have also earned him some very dangerous friends. As his
funeral draws near, those who knew him come together to look back
on a life characterised by corruption, deceit and a flair for
violence. Their recollections will keep Hongyang's legacy alive,
with terrifying consequences. From the master of Chinese noir
fiction comes this explosive new novel about the power of one man,
unravelled by a tangled web of secrets.
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WHITE HORSE (Paperback)
Yan Ge; Translated by Nicky Harman
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R231
R183
Discovery Miles 1 830
Save R48 (21%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Yun Yun lives in a small West China town with her widowed father
and an uncle, aunt and older cousin who live nearby. One day, her
once-secure world begins to fall apart. Through her eyes, we
observe her cousin, Zhang Qing, keen to dive into the excitements
of adolescence, but clashing with repressive parents. Ensuing
tensions reveal that the relationships between the two families are
founded on a terrible lie.
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Happy Dreams (Paperback)
Jia Pingwa; Translated by Nicky Harman
1
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R301
R237
Discovery Miles 2 370
Save R64 (21%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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From one of China's foremost authors, Jia Pingwa's Happy Dreams is
a powerful depiction of life in industrializing contemporary China,
in all its humor and pathos, as seen through the eyes of Happy Liu,
a charming and clever rural laborer who leaves his home for the
gritty, harsh streets of Xi'an in search of better life. After a
disastrous end to a relationship, Hawa "Happy" Liu embarks on a
quest to find the recipient of his donated kidney and a life that
lives up to his self-given moniker. Traveling from his rural home
in Freshwind to the city of Xi'an, Happy brings only an eternally
positive attitude, his devoted best friend Wufu, and a pair of
high-heeled women's shoes he hopes to fill with the love of his
life. In Xi'an, Happy and Wufu find jobs as trash pickers sorting
through the city's filth, but Happy refuses to be deterred by
inauspicious beginnings. In his eyes, dusty birds become phoenixes,
the streets become rivers, and life is what you make of it. When he
meets the beautiful Yichun, he imagines she is the one to fill the
shoes and his Cinderella-esque dream. But when the harsh city
conditions and the crush of societal inequalities take the life of
his friend and shake Happy to his soul, he'll need more than just
his unrelenting optimism to hold on to the belief that something
better is possible.
A graphic memoir like no other: the true story of a marriage in
China that spanned the twentieth century, told in vibrant, original
paintings and prose. WINNER OF AN ENGLISH PEN AWARD Rao Pingru was
a twenty-six-year-old soldier when he first saw the beautiful Mao
Meitang. One glimpse of her through a window as she put on lipstick
was enough to capture Pingru's heart. It was a moment that sparked
a union that would last almost sixty years. But when Meitang passed
away in 2008, Pingru realised that their marriage and all the small
moments and memories of a life together, would be lost to history.
And so at the age of eighty-eight, in an outpouring of love and
grief, Pingru began to paint. Our Story is a memorial to Pingru and
Meitang's epic romance, told through Pingru's exquisitely detailed
paintings and handwritten notes. We see Pingru and Meitang through
the decades, through both poverty and good fortune, and as they
grow so too does China: the nation undergoing political turmoil and
seismic cultural change. A tale both tragic and inspiring, of
enduring love and simple values, Our Story is an old-fashioned
romance that unfolds within the rush of a rapidly changing nation.
A love letter, a work of folk art and a historical testament, Our
Story is a truly unique graphic memoir. 'A beautifully warm,
personal, human story of life, love and family' Forbidden Planet
Ten chapters, ten women and many stories of heartbreak, including
her own: Xinran once again takes us right into the lives of Chinese
women and their lost daughters. Whether as a consequence of the
single-child policy, destructive age-old traditions or hideous
economic necessity, these women had to give up their daughters for
adoption, others were forced to abandon them - on city streets,
outside hospitals, orphanages or on station platforms - and others
even had to watch their baby daughters being taken away at birth,
and drowned. Personal, immediate, full of sorrow but also full of
hope, this books sends a heart-rending message to Chinese girls who
have been adopted to show them how things really were for their
mothers, and to tell them they were loved and will never be
forgotten.
One Family. Five generations. An epic story of love and loss.
China, 1879 With the Opium wars at their height, Fong Tak-Fat
boards a ship to Canada, determined to make a life for himself and
support his family back home. He will endure great hardship as he
works to build the Pacific Railway and save every penny he makes to
reunite his family. Canada, 2004 Amy Smith knows nothing of her
family history, a secret her mother will not share, until she is
summoned to her ancestral home in China to collect the forgotten
belongings of family members whom she has never met. Can Amy
finally unlock the door to her past? Telling the story of one
family's journey through five generations and across the seas, Gold
Mountain Blues is a heartrending tale of sacrifice, endurance, hope
and survival.
In PAPER TIGER the Chinese journalist and intellectual Xu Zhiyuan
paints a portrait of the world's second-largest economy via a
thoughtful and wide-ranging series of mini essays on contemporary
Chinese society. Xu Zhiyuan describes the many stages upon which
China's great transformation is taking place, from Beijing's
Silicon district to a cruise down the Three Gorges; he profiles
China's dissidents, including Liu Xiaobo, Ai Weiwei and Chen
Guangcheng; and explores lesser-known stories of scandals that
rocked China but which most people outside that country did not
hear about - and which shed troubling light on China's dark heart.
Xu Zhiyuan understands his homeland in a way no foreign
correspondent ever could. PAPER TIGER is a unique insider's view of
China that is measured and brave, ambitious in scope and deeply
personal.
This hugely important and ground-breaking book -- an unprecedented
oral history -- gives voice to a silent generation and tells the
secret history of 20th century China.
In 1912, five thousand years of feudal rule ended in China.
Warlords, Western businessmen, soldiers, missionaries and Japanese
all ruled China, exploited and fought one another and the Chinese.
In 1949, Mao Zedong came to power.
China Witness is both a journey through time and through the
author's own country, and a memorial to an extraordinary generation
of men and women who have survived war, invasion, revolution,
famine and modernization -- to tell the story of their times. It is
an extraordinary personal testimony from a normally silent
generation who, in their lifetimes have seen China transformed from
a largely peasant, agricultural country of more than 1.3 billion
people into a modern state. These are ordinary people -- a herb
woman at a market, retired teachers, a legendary "bandit" woman,
Red Guards, oil pioneers, an acrobat, a naval general, a shoe
mender, a lantern maker, taxi drivers, and others -- from west to
east, across the vast country, now in their seventies, eighties and
nineties, and whose memories will soon die with them.
Here, for the first time many of them speak out about their lives
and private thoughts about what they witnessed. Together their
intimate stories are perhaps the only accurate record of modern
Chinese history.
"From the Hardcover edition."
December 1937. The Japanese have taken Nanking. A group of
terrified schoolgirls hides in the compound of an American church.
Among them is Shujuan, through whose thirteen-year-old eyes we
witness the shocking events that follow. Run by Father Engelmann,
an American priest who has been in China for many years, the church
is supposedly neutral ground in the war between China and Japan.
But it becomes clear the Japanese are not obeying international
rules of engagement. As they pour through the streets of Nanking,
raping and pillaging the civilian population, the girls are in
increasing danger. And their safety is further compromised when
prostitutes from the nearby brothel climb over the wall into the
compound seeking refuge. Short, powerful, vivid, this beautiful
novel transports the reader to 1930s China. Full of wonderful
characters, from the austere priest to the irreverent prostitutes,
it is a story about how war upsets all prejudices and how love can
flourish amidst death.
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