Through this powerful, fiercely lyrical story of a Chinese garlic farmer's 1988 revolt, Mo Yan (Red Sorghum) uncompromisingly portrays the harsh realities of an existence difficult to comprehend. Garlic farmer Gao Ma aches with love for Fang Jinju, whose parents are using her as a pawn in an arranged marriage. Defying her two thuggish brothers and her father, who in the past has savagely beaten her, Jinju, pregnant with Gao Ma's child, runs away with him but meets a tragic end. The grief-stricken farmer is thrown in jail for his alleged role as ringleader of a farmer's riot-an angry mob has destroyed a government building to protest a county official's refusal to buy the garlic crop amid a surfeit. Gao Ma's fate is entwined with that of another imprisoned protestor, Gao Yang, who preserves his sanity through the love of his wife and blind 10-year-old daughter. Mo Yan fuses gritty realism, stunning imagery, acid satire, bawdiness, dream sequences, interior monologues, and flashbacks to the Cultural Revolution. His luminous prose lays bare the corrupt bureaucracy, grinding poverty and pervasive oppression borne by millions of inhabitants in the People's Republic. Copyright 1995 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
Copyright Reed Business Information
Mo Yan, author of the critically acclaimed Red Sorghum (LJ 3/15/93), which was made into a film directed by Zhang Yimou, presents a tale of brutality and corruption set in China in 1988. The novel focuses on the lives of three individuals imprisoned for their roles in the garlic revolt, a peasant uprising against corrupt government. Gao Ma has additional problems: his beloved has been promised to another in direct violation of the Marriage Laws, but the officials are siding with her family. The peasants are seen as adhering to the idealism of socialism and wondering how the new social formation came to be embodied in such corrupt officials. The action of the novel goes backward and forward in time, alternating between fact and fantasy. Overall, a very violent book, occasionally interrupted by scenes of domestic harmony; for a specialized readership.Debbie Bogenschutz, Cincinnati Technical Coll.
Copyright 1995 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
Copyright Reed Business Information
China's most popular novelist again takes us to the setting he so vividly brought to life in the very successfully filmed Red Sorghum the peasant villages of China that he depicts as situated in a myth-ridden, brutal, and hyperreal landscape. This time his novel unfolds in the late 1980s, when a bumper crop of a village's lifeblood, garlic, turns the community upside down, for this year garlic is a glut on the market--blame official corruption. Against this backdrop, three cleverly intertwined stories, as fanciful as a French farce, as fantastic as a Latin American tale, play out. In them we see both the lyricism and the absurdity of contemporary Chinese life conjured by the deft hand of a talented writer. Mo Yan's is a powerful and original voice, using sophisticated techniques to get at some very raw truths. (Reviewed Apr. 15, 1995)0670854018Mary Ellen Sullivan
From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc.
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