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Red Poppies

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Tibet, a tiny nation cloaked in mystery and clouded by myth, is the setting for this riveting family saga.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Fascinating details of pre-occupation Tibetan history and culture--the role of the lamas, the influence of the opium trade, and the last decades of a feudal system--form the backbone of this family saga rife with sex, drugs, and murder. Reader Ping Wu gives a fine performance as the narrator, the youngest "idiot" son of a powerful chieftain. He varies the voices of the large supporting cast appropriately. While the story is a bit slow to start, once it takes hold, it's compelling, juicy, and satisfyingly unpredictable. E.S. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      This rich ethnic novel is filled with events and people from the pre-occupation era of 1930 Tibet. The "idiot" second son of the chieftain Maiqi is the brilliant narrator. He is also the link between the old customs and a new world of ideas. From the planting of the opium poppies to the arrival of the Red Army, this wonder-filled story recreates a lost world of luxury, cruelty, and myth. Red Poppies, awarded China's highest literary award, the Mao Dun Prize, is read with verve and only a slight accent by Ping Wu. This reading, with its subtleinflections from each of the women and robust verbiage from the ferocious warriors, will enrich the listener's imagination, bringing each character into view as if embroidered on finest silk. B.H.B. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 11, 2002
      Tribal intrigue among neighboring chieftains in early 20th-century, pre-occupation Tibet drives this witty first novel (and first book in a projected trilogy) by an ethnic Tibetan writing in Chinese, exuberantly translated by Goldblatt and Lin. The first-person narrative follows the comic vicissitudes and nutty coming-of-age of the Maiqi clan's Second Young Master, known far and wide as an idiot. Second Young Master, whose warlike older brother is being groomed to take over the family's vast landholdings in what is now Sichuan province, falls in and out of favor with his parents, who are never quite sure if his simple pronouncements mean he's a true idiot or a sage. Young Master attains manhood by sleeping with his mother's maid, makes friends with the son of the family's indentured executioner and learns much from such visitors as the Han special emissary, who promises to enrich the Maiqi chieftain if he will plant opium poppies. Poppies are planted, swelling the family's coffers, but also attracting the jealousy of nearby chieftains. Young Master finally proves himself by maneuvering cannily with chieftains on the borders of the family estate, returning with "untold riches" and a beautiful wife; later in life, he is enmeshed in the battles between White and Red Chinese. Basing his portrayal of Young Master on a legendary Tibetan wise man, Agu Dunba, Alai creates a character endowed with enormous heart and humor. His story makes for a murky history lesson, but it succeeds marvelously as a wacky and immensely enjoyable portrait of a thoroughly unusual figure. (Mar. 6)Forecast:Though politically sensitive, this novel was published in China in 1998, where it was a critically acclaimed bestseller. Its sweep and humor make it one of the best of the wave of contemporary Chinese novels translated in recent years, though its idiosyncrasies may throw some readers.

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  • English

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