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Ai Weiwei is one of the world's most important living artists. Born
in 1957, he lives in Cambridge, UK.
Allan H. Barr is the author of a study in Chinese of a literary
inquisition in the early Qing dynasty, Jiangnan yijie- Qing ren
bixia de Zhuangshi shi'an, and the translator of several books by
contemporary Chinese authors, including Yu Hua's China in Ten Words
and Han Han's This Generation. He teaches Chinese at Pomona College
in California.
Intimate, unflinching ... an instant classic ... a glorious
testament to the power of free expression
*Evan Osnos, author of Age of Ambition*
This is the rarest sort of memoir, rising above the arc of history
to grasp at the limits of the soul
*Edward Snowden*
Above all a story of inherited resilience, strength of character
and self-determination
*Guardian*
An impassioned testament to the enduring powers of art
*Michiko Kakutani, author of Ex Libris*
Ai Weiwei is one of the world's greatest living artists. He is a
master of multiple media. His work is always thought-provoking,
unpredictable and immensely personal
*Elton John*
Told in painstaking but often beautiful detail... It's more like a
dual biography, with [his father] Ai Quing's story taking up the
first 150 pages, a useful corrective for westerners who know little
about him
*Guardian*
Engrossing... A remarkable story
*Sunday Times*
One of the world's most significant creative talents
*The Times*
The most important artist working today
*Financial Times*
A majestic and exquisitely serious masterpiece about his China,
which is in fact a book about our world. His is one of the great
voices of our time
*Andrew Solomon, author of Far from the Tree and Far and Away*
1000 years of joys and sorrows are here concentrated into a mere
100. They are years that teem with life of a startling variety. The
presentation is artful and the translation exquisite
*Perry Link, author of An Anatomy of Chinese*
An eloquent and unsilenceable voice of freedom
*New York Times*
Ai Weiwei is the kind of visionary any nation should be proud to
count among its creative class. He has drawn the world's attention
to the vibrancy of contemporary Chinese culture
*Time Magazine*
Elegiac... vivid and revealing
*Guardian*
[An] ambitious memoir... 1,000 Years of Joys and Sorrows touches on
the inevitable contradictions of being an activist and an art
superstar, but it is above all a story of inherited resilience,
strength of character and self-determination
*Observer*
Ai Weiwei's detention in 2011... forms by far the most compelling
part of the book... These exchanges are crisply and humanely
recreated, as are those with Ai's well-educated interrogators
*Daily Telegraph*
A close look at a father-son dynamic, written in affecting terms,
as well as a narrative about legacy, politics and creativity
*Time*
Few people have combined art and activism to greater international
acclaim than Ai Weiwei, with installations that address free
speech, the environment and the global migrant crises.... Ai's new
memoir, 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows, can be seen as another act
of defiance. As a child in Mao Zedong's China, he writes, he was
subject to a culture "that made our memories vanish like shadows."
The book, published November 2, is his effort to reclaim his
country's and his family's dramatic past
*Wall Street Journal Magazine*
An illuminating through-line emerges in the many parallels Ai
traces between his life and his father's... Ai writes evocatively
of the nights spent in his detention cell when "all I could do was
use memories to fill the time, looking back at people and events,
like gazing at a kite on a long string flying farther and farther,
until it cannot be seen at all." Most poignant are his midnight
conversations with the young, rural-born men employed to guard his
door, their cracking joints reminding Ai of "a crisp snapping sound
like a turnip being broken into two pieces... In "1000 Years of
Joys and Sorrows," Ai does not allow his own scraps to remain
buried. To unearth them is an act of unburdening, an open letter to
progeny, a suturing of past and present. It is the refusal to be a
pawn - and the most potent assertion of a self
*New York Times Book Review*
Moving and passionate... Weiwei writes with clarity and detail, and
readers can feel the anxiety of political turmoil and the power of
disobedience as he defies Chinese authorities, over and over again
... heart-rending yet exhilarating
*Bookpage*
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