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What Members Thought
This is an entertaining and very brief novella, which nevertheless manages to be disappointing in its characterization and its cramped worldview.
The unnamed narrator and his best friend, Luo, are Chinese city boys sent to a remote mountain for "re-education" in the early 1970s. While there, they pursue a local seamstress and a suitcase full of banned Western (mostly French) classics. The plot is mostly entertaining: what reader can resist a protagonist's quest to read books, complete with weird ...more
The unnamed narrator and his best friend, Luo, are Chinese city boys sent to a remote mountain for "re-education" in the early 1970s. While there, they pursue a local seamstress and a suitcase full of banned Western (mostly French) classics. The plot is mostly entertaining: what reader can resist a protagonist's quest to read books, complete with weird ...more
I read this book in the course of a single day, with the interruption of a nap leaving me to finish off the ending on the bus to work. Sure, it's not long, but the last book I read was shorter and I still wasn't driven to read it all in a day.
It's a sweet, sad tale of two teenagers making the best of their reeducation in the villages in China, and I loved the literature aspect. I also loved that the girl showed a lot of courage at the end, especially after Luo's rather condescending reasons for ...more
It's a sweet, sad tale of two teenagers making the best of their reeducation in the villages in China, and I loved the literature aspect. I also loved that the girl showed a lot of courage at the end, especially after Luo's rather condescending reasons for ...more
Oct 12, 2010
DubaiReader
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
ew-am-bk-grp-1,
2010
A delight to read.
This would have been a pleasant enough read but it was the humour embodied in the story that raised it to a 5 star book. At only 172 pages, it was a delight; I don't often say this but I'd have loved it to have been twice as long.
Luo and his friend, the narrator, are teenagers in 1971 when they are sent to a remote Szechuan village for 're-education'. From the moment they arrive with a violin which they rescue from its fate of burning by announcing that one of the songs it play ...more
This would have been a pleasant enough read but it was the humour embodied in the story that raised it to a 5 star book. At only 172 pages, it was a delight; I don't often say this but I'd have loved it to have been twice as long.
Luo and his friend, the narrator, are teenagers in 1971 when they are sent to a remote Szechuan village for 're-education'. From the moment they arrive with a violin which they rescue from its fate of burning by announcing that one of the songs it play ...more
This is a gentle telling of re-education during the Cultural Revolution, and is now one of several fiction and non-fiction descriptions of this. I liked the narrator and his buddy, Luo, and I am almost inclined to read some Balzac to better understand this. I did find the ending quite abrupt - that the little seamstress had taken Balzac's words to heart "a woman's beauty is a treasure beyond price", which seemed to have next to nothing to do with her deciding to see if she could go live in the c
...more
Mar 09, 2010
Kozue
marked it as to-read
Jul 16, 2011
Willow Curtis
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
historical-fiction,
contemporary-fiction
Nov 20, 2011
Michael Scott
marked it as to-read
Jul 09, 2016
Meg
marked it as to-read
Oct 01, 2019
Cheryl
marked it as to-read


















