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A Free Life: Unabridged Value-Priced Edition
 
 

A Free Life: Unabridged Value-Priced Edition [Audiobook, CD] [Audio CD]

Ha Jin , Jason Ma
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Ha Jin, who emigrated from China in the aftermath of Tiananmen Square, had only been writing in English for 12 years when he won the National Book Award for Waiting in 1999. His latest novel sheds light on an émigré writer's woodshedding period. It follows the fortunes of Nan Wu, who drops out of a U.S. grad school after the repression of the democracy movement in China, hoping to find his voice as a poet while supporting his wife, Pingping, and son, Taotao. After several years of spartan living, Nan and Pingping save enough to buy a Chinese restaurant in suburban Atlanta, setting up double tensions: between Nan's literary hopes and his career, and between Nan and Pingping, who, at the novel's opening, are staying together for the sake of their young boy. While Pingping grows more independent, Nan—amid the dulling minutiae of running a restaurant and worries about mortgage payments, insurance and schooling—slowly snuffs the torch he carries for his first love. That Nan at one point reads Dr. Zhivago isn't coincidental: while Ha Jin's novel lacks Zhivago's epic grandeur, his biggest feat may be making the reader wonder whether the trivialities of American life are not, in some ways, as strange and barbaric as the upheavals of revolution. (Nov.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* A poet as well as a fiction writer, Ha Jin writes of sacrifice, isolation, and valor with uncommon perception. In his earlier novels, including Waiting (1999), winner of the National Book Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award, and War Trash (2002), also a PEN/Faulkner Award winner, he looks back to China, his homeland. In his seventh work of fiction, Ha Jin anatomizes the immigrant experience. Nan Wu, a Chinese graduate student in Boston, drops out after the Tiananmen Square massacre. He would like to abandon his marriage, too, but his sense of duty toward Pingping and their young son is stronger than his desire for passion and the freedom to write poetry. So Nan laboriously progresses from busboy to chef, then purchases a small Chinese restaurant outside Atlanta, Georgia. He and Pingping work hard, live frugally, and strive to understand their baffling new world, including white friends who adopt a Chinese daughter. While Pingping evinces great strength of character, Nan remains deeply conflicted over his longing for art and his commitment to pragmatism until his ruminations on everything from the lives of birds to the differences between Chinese and English precipitate a profound liberation. For Nan, a free life is an honest and creative life. Capacious, pointillistic, empathic, and tender, Ha Jin's tale of one immigrant family's odyssey in America affirms humankind's essential mission, to honor life. Seaman, Donna --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Inspirational!, Mar 24 2011
By 
Louise Jolly "Bookaholic" (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Free Life (Paperback)
Ha Jin does a wonderful job of bringing the awareness of immigration to the forefront in this novel. Each day, immigrants often have to deal with the process of identity change and racism due to their colour.

Pingping and Nan imigrated to the United States and their six-year-old son, Taotao, arrives later. One sad part of this family is that Nan doesn't love his wife, Pingping, and instead pines for his old girlfriend. Pingping is aware of this but she remains a commited and loving wife to Nan and hopes one day he will realize how very, very much she loves him.

Nan is adamant that TaoTao be raised `American' and not as a `Chinese' as he believes the Chinese must endure too much suffering.

Pingping and Nan found it extremely difficult in America for the first two years until they'd
saved $30,000 to buy a restaurant to manage and these proved to be difficult times. Nan writes poetry and it is one of his poems that is the essence of the entire novel.

Wonderfully written but at 696 pages, it took me a couple of days to read it. However, this is a novel I would recommend to anyone.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A dream in China: reality in America, Jan 20 2011
By 
Richard J. Mcisaac (Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Free Life (Paperback)
A FREE LIFE, Ha Jin, Vintage, 2007

She too sells her hours in America.
Her dream has evolved into a house
On two acres of land with a pool.
She once dreamed of becoming a diva
Or movie star or a painter.

But she gave up art school
And came here to expand her self-hood.
At least that's what she planned to do.
p. 654

This poem is the essence of the novel. Pingping and Nan Wu had emigrated to America so Nan, could pursue a post grad degree. Taotao, their only child, age six, arrives later. One witnesses this sacrifice of separation by Chinese emigrants often, either it is the husband who remains in China or the child with the grandparents. Pingping is also aware that Nan doesn't love her, his heart yearning for a former girlfriend. He is also determined that his son 'must be spared the endless, gratuitous suffering to which the Chinese were accustomed' (p. 9) and that Taotao will be raised American. The Tienanmen Square Massacre (1979), the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) and the many misguided Five Year Plans are all fresh in many scholar's mind. During a return visit to China, his brother, Ning tells Nan he also wants to emigrate. The reasons and sad realities are listed on page 555.

Typical of many industrious and independently minded Chinese, after 2' years the Wu's managed to save $30 000 through frugal and cautious spending. Few Americans or Canadians could achieve this thriftiness and determination by working long hours at odd jobs and low pay.

One of the inexplicable hardships they had to endure, especially since they were of color, was racism. The author inserts many examples of this as the novel progresses, suffered mostly by Nan and Taotao at school. Ha Jin also intersperses inarguable negative facts about the behaviour of the communist party and cadres: the hypocrisy, the greed, the thirst for power, lying, deception, arbitrary decisions, inconsistency of decisions, and the need to control every aspect of the lives of its countrymen. He doesn't devote pages exposing these evils ' they are slipped in where the present situation provides the opportunity. They are even too numerous to begin listing.

After 12 ' years in the USA, Nan begins to live his dream of writing poetry. The poem, Homeland, by Nan Wu succinctly summarizes this novel. Through all the struggles, hardships and search, he now realizes he is the richest man alive ' he has family and resides in the USA. '...had to give up the illusion of success in order to accept the diminished state as a new immigrant and as a learner....' (p. 619)

HOMELAND

You won't be able to go back.
Look, the door has closed behind you.
Like others, you too are expendable to
A country never short of citizens....

Eventually you will learn;
Your country is where you raise your children,
Your homeland is where you build your home.
p. 635
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5.0 out of 5 stars A window onto the experience of being an immigrant, Aug 10 2009
By 
Marina Doucerain (Montreal, QC, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Free Life (Paperback)
In my opinion, "A free life" offers a profound reflection on the multi-faceted phenomenon that is immigration. With great mastery, Ha Jin brings to light the complex and intimate process of identity change which many immigrants must negotiate daily without much support.
Ha Jin's tone, while poignant and gripping, never falls into whining complacency, and this contributes to making "A free life" an essential reading to whomever seeks to fully understand the experience of being an immigrant.
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