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Diary of a Naked Official

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Anonymous, the keeper of the diary, deputy director of a publishing company in a nameless city in China, is a happily married man with a daughter until he succumbs fully to his sexual desires, forever searching for new erotic experiences and secret liaisons. Anonymous is able to hoard a fortune, by embezzlement or corruption, with which he buys permanent resident status for his wife and daughter in the West. He stays behind in China, a situation commonly referred to as a naked official in contemporary Chinese terminology, one who has nothing to fear when exposed because his family is safely installed overseas with all his money.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2014

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About the author

Ouyang Yu

41 books7 followers
Ouyang Yu is a poet based in Melbourne and since his first arrival in April 1991 in Australia, he has published quite a few poems. His eighth novel, All the Rivers Run South, is forthcoming with Puncher & Wattmann in 2023.

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5 (26%)
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6 (31%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Laidun.
5 reviews1 follower
November 5, 2018
Ouyang Yu is a depraved pervert. Look at his face, go Google his face. He has the same fishy look as Wang Xiaobo, another pervert.

I laughed a lot while reading this. It's very honest.
Profile Image for Michael Meeuwis.
315 reviews1 follower
March 1, 2015
Yeah, seing Michael Houllebecq cited approvingly in a novel--or indeed cited at all--isn't a good sign of anything. This story unravels as a series of listlessly sexual encounters, differing from each other largely in whether or not the protagonist is wearing a condom. You can tell where the novel feels it's said something really clever about contemporary sexual experience because it will repeat it three or four times. I suppose all of what I'm describing is the point of the novel--that contemporary life is marked by listlessly, repetitious sex acts--and I suppose on its own terms this succeeds in doing what it describes. But, eh.
Profile Image for Jeremy.
760 reviews17 followers
January 8, 2023
An "interesting" read. I enjoyed the Chinese perspective on Australia and the poetry was thought provoking
Profile Image for Wendy Siryj.
62 reviews
June 29, 2019
Well that was a week I will never get back. Up there with The Diceman and some of Bret Easton Ellis's books are the most narcissistic writing I have ever read. The protaginist was a misogynistic pig of a man who spent the whole book talking about his beloved penis and all his sexual escapades. I kept reading in the hope that all his pretention was going to amount to something....but no. Don't even bother. 👎👎
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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