All things old China - books, anecdotes, stories, podcasts, factoids & ramblings from the author Paul French

Weekend Deviation – That Booker Long List for this Year

Posted: August 8th, 2010 | No Comments »

So anything of interest to people who read  a lot of Asia books and share the same interests as this blog on the Booker Long List (comprising 13 books – the full list here)? Actually yes, though I think this year, if there’s any justice, Howard Jacobson will win with The Finkler Question and get the mainstream recognition he’s long deserved.Also there’s Andrea Levy who’s previous book Small Island was much praised on this blog. Well probably two obvious candidates for China Rhyming – blurbs below

David Mitchell The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet

1,000 autumns

Imagine a nation banishing the outside world for two centuries, crushing all vestiges of Christianity, forbidding its subjects to leave its shores on pain of death, and harbouring a deep mistrust of European ideas. The narrow window onto this nation-fortress is a walled, artificial island attached to the mainland port and manned by a handful of traders. Locked as the land-gate may be, however, it cannot prevent the meeting of minds – or hearts.

The nation was Japan, the port was Nagasaki and the island was Dejima, to where David Mitchell’s panoramic novel transports us in the year 1799. For one young Dutch clerk, Jacob de Zoet, a strage adventure of duplicity, love, guilt, faith and murder is about to begin – and all the while, unbeknownst to the men confined on Dejima, the axis of global power is turning…

Helen Dunmore – The Betrayal

betrayal

Leningrad in 1952 is a city recovering from war, where Andrei, a young hospital doctor and Anna, a nursery school teacher, are forging a life together. Summers at the dacha, preparations for the hospital ball, work and the care of sixteen year old Kolya fill their minds. They try hard to avoid coming to the attention of the authorities, but even so their private happiness is precarious. Stalin is still in power, and the Ministry for State Security has new targets in its sights. When Andrei has to treat the seriously ill child of a senior secret police officer, Volkov, he finds himself and his family caught in an impossible game of life and death – for in a land ruled by whispers and watchfulness, betrayal can come from those closest to you. A gripping and deeply moving portrait of life in post-war Soviet Russia, “The Betrayal” brilliantly shows the epic struggle of ordinary people to survive in a time of violence and terror.



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