Wang Xiaobo (Author)
Wang Xiaobo was born in 1952. From 1968 to 1970, he worked on a
farm in Yunnan, China, as an 'educated' youth. He published Golden
Age in 1992, first in Taiwan, but publication in China soon
followed, where it was an immediate success, still topping
bestseller lists today. Wang Xiaobo died of a heart attack in 1997,
at the age of forty-four.
Some of the funniest writing on sex I have encountered ... Through
a colourful cast of characters the writer satirises a society in
which the Cultural Revolution continued to shape behaviour for
decades
*Observer*
An edgy, insider's take on China ... a satire of the Cultural
Revolution by the most popular modern author in China
*The Sunday Times*
Both subversive and hilarious ... so enjoyable
*Financial Times*
Is this Mao-era China's most hilarious black comedy? Wang Xiaobo's
Golden Age sees its protagonist, like its author, sent for
're-education' - and a very funny, farcical sexual awakening...
branded "the Chinese Kafka"... full of hilarity. There are
wonderful observations about sex under public scrutiny ... I cannot
extol Wang's penetrating prose enough
*The Telegraph*
Wang Xiaobo's 1990s knockabout satire is a revelation. His tale of
China's Cultural Revolution is no sombre lesson, but an antic and
anarchic extravaganza
*Independent*
An ironist, in the vein of Kurt Vonnegut, with a piercing eye for
the intrusion of politics into private life… Long after his death,
of a heart attack, at the age of forty-four, Wang’s views still
circulate among fans like a secret handshake
*New Yorker*
Golden Age (a title oozing irony) is an ultra-modern blast of
thrillingly wrong-footing licentiousness. Determined to smash
taboos, it revels in the anti-authoritarian power of lust
*Daily Mail*
One of China's modern masterpieces ... a political satire fuelled
by sex, love and humour
*BBC Open Book*
Wang Xiaobo is a truly unique writer, and there are very few
writers like him. He had a remarkable ability to blend illusion
with reality, distorting our understanding and infusing our
feelings into the narrative of his language. This blending is so
absurd, so real and palpable. Perhaps only a select few are capable
of expressing their life experiences, imagination, and sexuality in
relation to a vast and omnipresent political environment as Wang
Xiaobo did.
What made Wang Xiaobo's writing so successful was his ability to
use the most commonplace language to express the most heartfelt
emotions in his inner world, and the most unspeakable real. When we
encounter this kind of real while reading, we are left speechless;
when "real" reaches a certain level, it all feels so unfamiliar and
strange to us. It is precisely when this feeling of unfamiliarity
emerges that the power of real reveals itself in Wang Xiaobo's
words
*Ai Weiwei*
In this excellent translation by Yan Yan, Golden Age demonstrates
that Wang Xiaobo is one of the most original writers in post-Mao
China. At once hilarious and charged with serious political
discourse, Golden Age is a tour de force. It is as playful as
Animal Farm by Orwell and as complex as Master and Margarita by
Bulgakov. Anyone who is interested in modern China should read this
book
*Xiaolu Guo*
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