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Running Through Beijing

Autor Xu Zechen Traducere de Eric Abrahamsen
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 iul 2014
Chinese literature published in the United States has tended to focus on politics — think the Cultural Revolution and dissidents — but there's a whole other world of writing out there. It's punk, dealing with the harsh realities lived by the millions of city-dwellers struggling to get by in the grey economy. Dunhuahg, recently out of prison for selling fake IDs, has just enough money for a couple of meals. He also has no place to stay and no prospects for earning more yuan. When he happens to meet a pretty woman selling pirated DVDs, he falls into both an unexpected romance and a new business venture. But when her on-and-off boyfriend steps back into the picture, Dunhuahg is forced to make some tough decisions. Running Through Beijing explores an underworld of constant thievery, hardcore porn, cops (both real and impostors), prison bribery, rampant drinking, and the smothering, bone-dry dust storms that blanket one of the world's largest cities. Like a literary Run Lola Run, it follows a hustling hero rushing at breakneck speed to stay just one step ahead. Full of well-drawn, authentic characters, Running Through Beijing is a masterful performance from a fresh Chinese voice.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781931883368
ISBN-10: 193188336X
Pagini: 161
Dimensiuni: 127 x 203 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Editura: Two Lines Press

Recenzii


Praise for Running Through Beijing:

“The novel captures the taste and tension of Beijing better than any I’ve ever read.” — Los Angeles Review of Books

"Running through Beijing is clean and fast, deeply felt and very smart: a profoundly engaging story about a certain kind of honor, and a certain kind of thief, and a life that feels hidden in plain sight."
Roy Kesey, author of Pacazo and Any Deadly Thing

“Xu Zechen has captured with colloquial grace the frenetic pace of a Beijing heartbeat where dust storms, crackdowns, pirated DVD porn, and double lives are the norm. . . . Eric Abrahamsen’s translation sparkles like a crystal bobblehead.”
Jeffrey Yang, author of An Aquarium and Vanishing-Line

“A window onto Beijing’s seamy, crime-ridden underbelly . . . a vibrant story by one of China’s rising young writers. I’d check it out if I were you.” — Book Riot

“Uplifting, thrilling. . . . The novel itself, with its sharp, detailed prose and vivid storytelling, creates an exhilaration, a giddy hope in the reader . . .” — Numéro Cinq

"Its fast-paced, engaging, realistic plot keeps the pages turning at a furious pace, and when the end arrives all too quickly, the crushing beauty of its final message leaves one desperate for more pages . . ." — Typographical Era

“As the construction sites and desertification in surrounding areas raise dust storms in Beijing, the capital is covered in a haze of moral uncertainty. This is the setting of the story of Dunhuang, seller of fake IDs and pirated DVDs, but not all is unclear: there’s the clarity of Xu’s realistic treatment of life for the outcastes of China’s development, and of Abrahamsen’s exacting translation into English.”
Lucas Klein, translator of Notes on the Mosquito

"Xu has something real to offer the ever-burgeoning literature of Chinese despair. — Words Without Borders

"This novel’s style is sparse and direct, representing a divergence from traditional Chinese literature" — National Endowment for the Arts

"This is a fine novel. . . . It is likely to be enjoyed." — Asian Review of Books

Praise for Xu Zechen:
"His silent toiling has given voice to the equally silent social classes struggling on the boundaries of the country's urban landscape" — China Daily

"Reflects on the scattergun entrepreneurialism and economic inequality of the new Beijing" — The Financial Times

"The glory of the post-1970 writers" — Master magazine

Notă biografică

Xu Zechen is the author of the novels Midnight's Door, Night Train, and Heaven on Earth and was selected by People's Literature as one of the "Future 20" best Chinese writers under 41. The recipient of numerous awards and honors, he lives in Beijing.

Eric Abrahamsen is the recipient of translation grants from PEN and the NEA and has written for The New York Times, among others. In 2012 Penguin published his translation of The Civil Servant's Notebook by Wang Xiaofang. He lives in Beijing.