ORDERS

Readings Orders 0

DEMANDS

Readings Demands 0

Woman From Shanghai:Tales Of Survival From a Chinese Labor Camp
[Paperback - 2010]
On Demand
Availability in 4-6 weeks on receipt of order
List Price: $16
Our Price: Rs.2795 Rs.2376
Standard Discount: 15%
You Save: Rs.419
Category: Fiction
Sub-category: Literary Fiction
Additional Category: Historical Fiction - Political Fiction
Publisher: Anchor | ISBN: 9780307390974 | Pages: 320
Shipping Weight: .227 | Dimensions: 5.16 x .7 x 7.99 inches

In Woman from Shanghai, Xianhui Yang, one of China’s most celebrated and controversial writers, gives us a work of fact-based fiction that reveals firsthand—and for the first time in English—what life was like in one of Mao’s most notorious labor camps.

Between 1957 and 1960, nearly three thousand Chinese citizens were labeled “Rightists” by the Communist Part and banished to Jianiangou in China’s northwestern desert region of Gansu to undergo “reeducation” through hard labor. These exiles men and women were subjected to horrific conditions, and by 1961 the camp was closed because of the stench of death: of the rougly three thousand inmates, only about five hundred survived.

In 1997, Xianhui Yang traveled to Gansu and spent the next five years interviewing more than one hundred survivors of the camp. In Woman from Shanghai he presents thirteen of their stories, which have been crafted into fiction in order to evade Chinese censorship but which lose none of their fierce power. These are tales of ordinary people facing extraordinary tribulations, time and again securing their humanity against those who were intent on taking it away.

Xianhui Yang gives us a remarkable synthesis of journalism and fiction—a timely, important and uncommonly moving book.

Xianhui Yang lives in Tianjin, China. Woman from Shanghai is his first book to be translated into English.

Wen Huang is a writer and translator whose articles and translations have appeared in the Paris Review, the Asian Literary Review, the Chicago Tribune and The Christian Science Monitor. He translated Chinese writer Liao Yiwu’s The Corpse Walker: Real Life Stories: China from the Bottom Up.

Bestsellers in Fiction

View All