Skip navigation

Fairfax County Public Library Catalog

 Spanish 
Search Find It Fast! Kids' Library My Account Comments Library Information
Go Back New Search Change Display Logout
record 1 of 1 for search "00621674{001}"
Sons of heaven : a novel
    Cheng, Terrence.
Publisher: William Morrow,
Pub date: c2002.
Pages: 312 p.
ISBN: 0060002433
Item info: 3 copies available at CHANTILLY REGIONAL, CITY OF FAIRFAX REGIONAL, and RESTON REGIONAL.
3 copies total in all locations. 
Holdings Change Display
CHANTILLY REGIONAL Copies Material Location
FIC CHE 1 Book Shelves
CITY OF FAIRFAX REGIONAL Copies Material Location
FIC CHE 1 Book Shelves
RESTON REGIONAL Copies Material Location
FIC CHE 1 Book Shelves
Publishers Weekly Review
Centering around the Tiananmen Square massacre and its aftermath, this remarkably structured and textured debut epic seeks to attach a face to the mysterious man who, by stepping in front of the rolling army tanks, became the most recognizable symbol of the massacres. Cheng succeeds in his endeavor, and in the process he gives China a face as wellone so vivid and provocative it's hard to walk away without a fresh impression of the massacre, the 13 years since, and modern-day China in general. Three months before the massacre, Xiao-Di returns to China after spending four years at Cornell University, where he fell in love with a blonde American girl who left him upon graduation. But he has tasted freedom and his return to China is turbulent. He cannot find work. He grapples with the way the masses adhere to tradition and respect authority. He lives with his grandparents (his parents are dead) and when not at home feeling angry and confused, he is out with his friend Wong, bleakly contemplating the future. Then, through the eyes of president Deng Xiaoping, we enter Tiananmen Square, where students have begun protesting. Cheng successfully humanizes the person he has called a complicated man, driven by a genuine passion to create a better society for the Chinese people. Xiao-Di soon finds himself impulsively partaking in a hunger strike and, before long, facing down a tank. Complicating matters is his brother, Lu, a Chinese soldier who is sent with a unit to find Xiao-Di. Through the brothers and their grandparents, a multifaceted and sophisticated portrait of the Chinese people is rendered. This is a rare find: historical and political without being pedantic, and briskly entertaining without being cheap, simplistic or contrived.Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
Library Journal Review
Cheng left Taiwan in 1973 as an infant and grew up in New York. In 1989, he watched the TV reports of the anonymous young man who challenged the tanks in Tiananmen Square and was never heard from again. Cheng's debut novel traces a possible biography for this iconic character. A math student who spent his college years in the States, the young man returns to China, where his long-standing engagement turns sour and the fiance's family retaliates by blackballing him. Living with helpless grandparents and abandoned by an older brother, he joins the fasting students in Tiananmen Square. As Cheng limns the agony of this youth, he also traces the parallel thoughts and actions of the mastermind at the top of the government, Deng Xiaoping, and the true believer at its bottom, the student's brother, who is a lowly soldier. Despite some fevered overplotting, there is much grace, drama, and insight to be enjoyed; Cheng is particularly effective in depicting the perilous state of mind experienced by risk-taking. A ripping good story about a headline event of great power and resonance, it is sure to be marketed heavily and will appeal to many public library patrons. Barbara Conaty, Library of CongressCopyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
Booklist Review
Anyone who has ever seen the photograph of a young Chinese man standing before a parade of moving tanks, waving his arms in the air as if he had the power to stop an army, has probably never forgotten it. Although the student uprising at Tiananmen Square in Beijing was 13 years ago, the photograph of the unidentified man standing before tons of rolling green steel in the name of democracy inspired Terrence Cheng to write this novel, which does not tout opposition to Chinese policies but, instead, captures the very human side of political turmoil and its inadvertent destruction of families. Writing from the perspective of the dissident student, his brother the soldier, and China's leader at the time, Cheng paints a tragic picture of what happens when brothers are caught at opposite ends of the spectrum in a place where clear-cut loyalties are not a choice but a requirement. Packed with emotion and desperation, Cheng's novel speaks for a man who needed a voice. Elsa Gaztambide. From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.

Full View From Catalog
key: 00621674
ISBN: 0060002433
Local Dewey call num: FIC CHE
Local call number: 131 RUSH
Personal Author: Cheng, Terrence.
Title: Sons of heaven : a novel / Terrence Cheng.
Publication info: New York : William Morrow, c2002.
Physical descrip: 312 p.
Personal subject: Deng, Xiaoping, 1904-1997--Fiction.
Subject term: Young men--China--Fiction.
Subject term: Brothers--China--Fiction.
Geographic term: China--History--1989, Tiananmen Square Incident--Fiction.
892: PB/kpad
Go Back New Search Change Display Logout