Waiting: A Novel
by Ha Jinpublished
September 19th 2000
by Vintage
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binding
Paperback, 320 pages
literary awards
PEN/Faulkner Award (2000); National Book Award (1999)
isbn
0375706410
(isbn13: 9780375706417)
description
"Every summer Lin Kong returned to Goose Village to divorce his wife, Shuyu." Like a fairy tale, Ha Jin's masterful novel of love and politi...more
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avg 3.46
Read in April, 2005
The onslaught of awards and critical acclaim this book has garnered (including the biggie, The National Book Award of 1999) epitomizes the most lamentable trend in such current practices: pandering political correctness.
Despite featuring wooden dialogue spoken by boring characters I could care less about and descriptions that rival phone book listings in their vividness, Waiting DOES conform to pre-existing, fetishized Western notions of Chinese culture. Thus, delighted progressive (probabl...more
Despite featuring wooden dialogue spoken by boring characters I could care less about and descriptions that rival phone book listings in their vividness, Waiting DOES conform to pre-existing, fetishized Western notions of Chinese culture. Thus, delighted progressive (probabl...more
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recommends it for:
hedgehogs, sloths, slow lorises
This book did make me feel like I was waiting, so maybe it did what it set out to do. But it wasn't a good kind of waiting. It was the kind of waiting I used to do when I would have to go to some government office with my parents and they would make me sit still and behave myself, and I would feel a terrible physical ache in unmentionable parts of my body from having to contain so much desire to fidget. Actually, that sounds a lot more exciting than this book was.
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Read in July, 2007
I enjoyed many things about this book: its clear, simple language; its deceptive simplicity (it's got the rhythm of a folk tale or fable but is layered with meaning and feeling); its quiet, deliberate pace; the rich detail, particularly in descriptions of natural settings which shine with poetry.
I have some complaints as well. The dialogue is often stilted and strange ("bye-bye now") or peppered with odd phrases that distract ("by hook or by crook," "shilly shallying...more
I have some complaints as well. The dialogue is often stilted and strange ("bye-bye now") or peppered with odd phrases that distract ("by hook or by crook," "shilly shallying...more
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Read in January, 2004
As someone who grew up in China, I found the characters very real. I read many reviews about this book talking about how none of characters are likable, except for the simple peasant ex-wife of Lin's.
But I think that is what the author was trying to tell us-that the system reduced every individual's humanity and individuality to the extent no one was a complete person anymore. The only reason that the simple peasant wife Shuyu seems to be more likable is because she was more human than a...more
But I think that is what the author was trying to tell us-that the system reduced every individual's humanity and individuality to the extent no one was a complete person anymore. The only reason that the simple peasant wife Shuyu seems to be more likable is because she was more human than a...more
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Read in August, 2008
What Waiting reveals about chinese culture and the effects of the Cultural Revolution on (recently) contemporary China is fascinating. And to be sure, this book is steeped in such information from the mind-boggling ways in which politics enter into the most non-political facets of everyday life to details of cuisine that westerners would never guess were edible (jellyfish!!!). For this alone, the book is worth a read.
But sadly, the protagonist is not only unsympathetic, he he boring; so fru...more
But sadly, the protagonist is not only unsympathetic, he he boring; so fru...more
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Read in June, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in August, 2007
I enjoyed my second reading of this book by Ha Jin much more than the first. Perhaps it was timing or my still-maturing literary consciousness, but for me, the book has ripened significantly in the 7 or 8 years since my first perusal. While I cannot say that I admire the characters of Lin or Manna any more than I originally did, Shuyu stood out to me as a shining example of "blooming where you're planted". She managed to be happy, productive and capable of growth and forgiveness, in...more
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Read in April, 2007
the main thing which sticks out to me about this book (apart from the culture shock-ness of 70s China, sounding more like the turn of the 20th century until we are given some dates and clues further on in the novel) is that nobody is perfect.
in fact, hardly any of the characters are likeable - not that you find yourself disliking them too much either. Lin, the main character, is very weak willed and lives a dispassionate life - however, he goes through a lot with respect to his different pa...more
in fact, hardly any of the characters are likeable - not that you find yourself disliking them too much either. Lin, the main character, is very weak willed and lives a dispassionate life - however, he goes through a lot with respect to his different pa...more
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Read in April, 2004
i first came across this book in 2004. i have to admit that the politics alluded me, the history of communist china isnt exactly my thing, but what i got out of this book when i read it was the universality of the concept of “waiting”. when you think about it, we are all waiting…for something. we will spend our entire lives waiting for one thing or another, and each time we acquire what we were waiting for, we find something else to be waiting for. we always think that what we are waiting ...more
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Read in June, 2006
Good winter read. Walks you through the emotional details of a man's life as he struggles with choosing between his life in the rural Chinese countryside and his work at a military base in a large city. He spends 11 years agonizing over whether to leave his simple wife and child behind for a more modern life with a military nurse. Ha Jin is a master at making you feel the magnitude of the decision by building sympathy with each character. At the same time, his detailed account of everyday li...more
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Read in July, 2007
I couldn't decide if I wanted to give this book one or two stars, but ultimately decided to go with two because it kept my attention and was a fast read. That being said however, I hated almost everything about this book, particularly the main characters. There were times when I thought the strength of my burning hatred for the main character would be enough to ignite the book into flames. But if you like books about weak, self absorbed, indecisive, and passionless characters who are not even re...more
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Read in January, 2000
I so wanted to like this book. It won some awards and I had heard good things about it. But I found that I had no interest in the characters and really hated the time that I spent with them. I was happy for the book to end. I think that it was the author's intent for me to be frustrated with the characters and the title "Waiting" seemed to refer to the lives of these people, who could just never act or do the thing that they thought would make them happy. But the more I read, the more ...more
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recommends it for:
people who have insomnia
I am not sure why this book won anything - a relay race, a pie-eating contest, let alone a National Book Award. It's got a good theme to it - how the communist Chinese government's totalitarian ways caused great unhappiness - but the writing was so dull that I couldn't deal. I was just Waiting for it to end. It went something like this:
"I had only 12 more years before I could divorce my wife and marry Manna."
A bird flew by the window. A leaf fell from a tree. The clouds were gr...more
"I had only 12 more years before I could divorce my wife and marry Manna."
A bird flew by the window. A leaf fell from a tree. The clouds were gr...more
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Not as good as its clipplings. Ha Jin's prose here isn't particularly elegant or memorable. The pacing is intentionally slow--I get it, waiting--which is fine in itself, but such a form means that readers expect their patience to be rewarded in the end, and I didn't feel sufficient payoff. There are many pieces of slow, understated fiction where the words veritably glows with energy. I wouldn't put Waiting in that category.
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Read in February, 2008
I finished this book inspite of the fact that I didn't really enjoy it at all. The writing was very simple and I can only remember two sentences that really struck me. I didn't particularly care for the characters in the beginning and that didn't improve by the end. Overall, a disappointing read. I wonder why it won the 'National Book Award.' Does anybody know why? Enlighten me, please.
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There is a reason it's called Waiting. You wait the whole book for something to happen!!
I know it won all kinds of awards and everyone jumped on the bandwagon to say how great it was-I say the emperor was wearing no clothes!
There is a reason it's called Waiting. You wait the whole book for something to happen!!
I know it won all kinds of awards and everyone jumped on the bandwagon to say how great it was-I say the emperor was wearing no clothes!
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Read in July, 2008
A look at Chinese society in the 1960s and 1970s with the Cultural Revolution as a backdrop. We see how the political and social situation shapes of two people who just want to be together, but must wait and wait.
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Not much action actually happens in this novel, but it is so beautifully written that the reader is still captivated.
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Read in January, 2007
The motto of this books seems to be ‘Be careful what you wish for because you might get it.’
Lin is a doctor and an officer in the Chinese Army. His aging parents arrange a marriage for him, to a local girl in his home village. Shuyu is plain and simple. He doesn’t love her, but they conceive a child and she cares for his parents devotedly, while he works in the city. Lin falls in love with a nurse, Manna and after 17 years of an unfulfilling marriage to Shuyu, he asks her for a divorce...more
Lin is a doctor and an officer in the Chinese Army. His aging parents arrange a marriage for him, to a local girl in his home village. Shuyu is plain and simple. He doesn’t love her, but they conceive a child and she cares for his parents devotedly, while he works in the city. Lin falls in love with a nurse, Manna and after 17 years of an unfulfilling marriage to Shuyu, he asks her for a divorce...more
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Read in October, 2008
This is one of the finest novels I have come across in donkey's years. I was engrossed. It is the story of the two Chinas of the 1970s and 1980s, as personified by two women. I finished it after an all-night binge that had me up until 4 a.m. It's that good.
Lin Kong is the plot pivot-point. His marriages and connections to Shuyu and Manna illustrate the broader implications of the Cultural Revolution; the country/city divide; restrictions on personal freedoms; the male/female differences in ...more
Lin Kong is the plot pivot-point. His marriages and connections to Shuyu and Manna illustrate the broader implications of the Cultural Revolution; the country/city divide; restrictions on personal freedoms; the male/female differences in ...more
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