Taken to an execution ground with forty other prisoners, a famed Chinese poet and writer survives death, an experience that is set against a backdrop of China's anti-right campaign of the 1950s, the Cultural Revolution, and 1980s repression
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Language Notes:
Text: English (translation)
Original Language: Chinese
From Publishers Weekly:
Few American novels can approach the power and impact of this extraordinary work, a fictionalized autobiography by the Chinese author of Half of Man Is Woman . A harrowing account of the effects of repressive government on the individual, the novel moves between China and San Francisco, New York and Paris as its protagonist examines his own "old-fashioned patriotism" during a trip to the West. Central to the character's psyche are the wounds left by his attempted "reformation" by the Communists, a process which at one point involves his being marched to the execution ground--and left alive while those around him are killed, to wait for the rest of his life for the bullet to find him. The scene on the execution ground is unforgettable, its shocking subject filtered through a careful and farseeing irony. Although the level of the writing is generally sophisticated, the prose is occasionally self-conscious or strained--but this failing in no way impinges on the book's greatest accomplishment, its inherent refutation of its own dire assessment of China today: "A country that cannot produce a nobility of the spirit is a country that is doomed."
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"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
- PublisherHarper Collins Publishers
- Publication date1991
- ISBN 10 0002237415
- ISBN 13 9780002237413
- BindingHardcover
- Edition number1
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Rating