From Publishers Weekly
Numerous rocks of Chinese history are overturned in the star novelist's third collection, usually revealing darkness and decay. The book begins with poems about Yu the Great, who, according to legend, devised a drainage system when the Yellow River flooded its banks around the 20th century B.C., wreaking havoc on the land and its people. Even when "caged in high dikes," its threat is not forgotten: "Who can keep the river up/ in the clouds forever?" The notion that disaster is always just around the corner pervades the collection, though its components read less like poems than terse mini-fables stitched loosely together to form a tapestry of sacrifice and suffering. Violence comes from without and within, in the form of attacks by so-called barbarians as well as the capriciousness and brutality of emperors and bureaucrats: "Lord of Heaven, how can you govern/ the earth like a fool/ and let officials multiply/ more than laborers and taxpayers?" The heinous treatment of women is a recurrent theme from a concubine mutilated and thrown into an outhouse pit ("Human Pig") to a gruesome account of foot binding ("A Young Girl's Lament"), in which it is observed how "the toes curl in like dead caterpillars./ Who would think they belong to a human being?" Cannibalism during drought or wartime is mentioned frequently "Salvation" describes "human flesh/ served in restaurants under/ the name Two-Legged Lamb." Dealing with such charged material forces the poet to flatten his affect. If the writing occasionally borders on the banal, it seems consciously intended to reflect the banality of evil. (June)Forecast: A former People's Army soldier, Ha Jin eventually landed in the U.S. for an English Ph.D., and remained after the Tiananmen massacre. Eight books later, Waiting received critical raves and went on to win the National Book Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award. This collection should attract readers of his fiction and fans of his poetry alike.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Ha Jin's empathetic poems follow the chronological order of Imperial China's dynastic history from ancient legend, through centuries of emperors, to the time of the Boxer Rebellion in 1900. Within this large span, the National Book Award winner (for the novel Waiting) dwells not on silk screens and temples but individuals who endure natural disaster and the brutalities of Confucian hierarchical authority. Many of the poems are thus both stunning and horrific, covering topics like castration, footbinding, and a boy's death in a plague. Clearly, Jin perceives the "wreckage" as China's "curse" as well as its "temperament." As a result, he does not oversimplify the many complexities of Chinese culture, such as victimization by Mongols and sacrifices made for "unconditional/ order and propriety." Whether it's a laborer in ancient China hearing his children cry from hunger or an opium smoker in the time of the Dowager Empress sobbing over his daughter, pawned at a brothel for $40, these poems are suffused with elegiac sorrow for family and land. What stays with the reader is the poet's grief for a people "bound together" by a history of both "shame and glory." A powerful collection, Jin's third book of poetry bears witness to a sad, troubled bond with his homeland. Frank Allen, Northampton Community Coll., Tannersville, PA
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.