I AM CHINA - XIAOLU
GUO
Iona Kirkpatrick
lives in a flat in North London and is contracted to translate from
Chinese to English, the letters and diaries of Mu and Jian.
These two had a
strong relationship in China but have become separated and estranged
after the birth of a child who died, we are not informed of this
event until quite late on in the book. The letters and diaries
reflect the strain and their feelings for one another.
Jian becomes an
agitator against Chinese authority and takes part in Tianamen Square
demonstrations attracting the attention of his father, a senior
politician, resulting in him banning his son from China. Mu looses
contact with him and feeling abandoned goes back to live
with her parents. She enjoys writing poetry and somehow is able to
leave her family to begin touring in the USA.
Jian was sent to
England and arrived in Dover to be detained in an
immigration camp for many months before being transferred
to Switzerland.
Moving on from there
to France, Greece and the Greek Islands.
There are very mixed
feelings about this book but all agreed it was difficult to get into
because of constantly referring backwards/ present time and found
this particularly irritating. Some gave up because of it others
continued to enjoy the story and insight into China in modern
history, where education for girls was not considered necessary and
difficult to obtain. Therefore for a Chinese woman to achieve success
as a novelist is a major accomplishment in its own right,
particularly in English Language.
There are some
doubtful phrases including Jian's letter to, and reply from the
Queen. His ability to travel across Europe seemingly un hindered and
Mu's ability to tour the USA with her poetry.
Marks varied from
3(1) to 9(2) with an overall average of 6.
-------------------
Maggies review:
I enjoyed reading this although I found the movement between voices and times hard to start with.
I
felt that the innermost feelings of Jian,Mu and Iona were extremely
well portrayed with beautiful language. In particular the experience of
Jian,cut adrift from his family and state came across with all of his
anger and despair. I found a parallel in this with Iona's own
unhappiness - manifested in meaningless casual sexual encounters.
The
book moved me to tears in several places - with the sad hopelessness of
Jian and Mu's separation; and the loss of their child as well as Mu's
description of her father's dying days.
I liked the way in which parts of modern Chinese history were woven into the storytelling - some of it quite chilling.
There
were a couple of things that I found irritating - Jian's letter to the
Queen which seemed to indicate a naive understanding of democracy given
his political idealism in China. But even more the supposed reply from
HM.
I'm
also not convinced that Iona's stumbling upon her father with his
mistress would have been enough to colour her adult attitudes and
behaviours in the way this is implied. At 15 would she have been so
traumatised by this that she would as an adult treat sexual liaisons
almost as a way of punishing herself. Or have I got that wrong?
Overall
though I found this a thoroughly good read with well drawn characters, a
compelling story line and wonderful use of language. It's a book which
really made me think about modern China and its influence in the world.
My score is 9
I
hope you all enjoy discussing it - I'm really sorry that I can't be
there to hear what everyone has to say and whether others liked it as
much as I did.
Second Review:
Dear All
Second Review:
Dear All
I am really sorry to be missing this discussion. It was good
to have something more challenging. I agree with all Maggie’s comments,
especially the quality of the writing. I had the luck in the Library to find
Xiaolu Guo’s autobiography “Once upon a time in the East”, and think you would
all find it as interesting as I did. It says a great deal about the Chinese
Education system that a girl whose primary education was in a small, poor
isolated fishing village, living with an illiterate grandmother, was eventually,
from a provincial urban secondary school, able from 6000 applicants to gain one
of 11 places at Beijing Film school, and later to master English in the way that
she has, and devise complex structures for her story. To be one of Granta’s Best
Young British Novelists in 2013 is an amazing achievement. The book itself is a
great addition to our repertoire of migrant stories, and the counterpoint
between the leaver & remainer (!) very clever.
I too would give it 9.
And mine:
I don't like this book, but you do want to know what happens to Jian and Mu. The author must have a very low opinion of British women, the way that she makes the translator Iona go out periodically to get a quickie from any male she can, even if it is in a hovel. There are too many stories in here, and they are all over the pace timewise. We have Iona's story, the random transcriptions of Mu and Jian's letters, and the stories of what Jian and Mu are doing at different times. Jian's is almost chronological, but in the past compared with the Iona story and moving at a faster rate. My feeling is that it is a feminist book, as none of the men seem any good.
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