
编辑推荐ACCLAIM FOR DAI SIJIE’S ONCE ON A MOONLESS NIGHT:“beautifully written (and translated)” - Aamer Hussein, The Independent “rich and ambitious….Sijie makes virtuosic use of the stories-within-stories technique which is so attractive to contemporary sensibilities and paints a vivid portrait of both imperial excesses and communist absurdities.” - Michael Arditti, Daily Mail “magisterial….structurally more complex than his international hit, Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress….just as rich and evocative and powerfully delivers the idea that lnaguage (even more than literature, as in Balzac) truly defines us. This should be almost as big as Balzac. Highly recommended.” - Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal From the first British reviews: “cunning literary confection, blending history, romance, a long-lost manuscript and the magic of the Orient….[an] elegant web.” - Max Davidson, The Mail on Sunday “a potent and evocative modern-day fable.” - Alastair Mabbott, The Herald (Glasgow) “Sijie's ambitious work spans a thousand years of Chinese history….[with] a rich repository of tales, traditions and sensibilities [the book's] theme of indeterminacy of meaning is braided into the clash between East and West….Sijie has a gift for the spectacular.” - Chitralekhua Basu, Times Literary Supplement “an unlikely love affair twists and turns through Dai’s story….but it is the stops along the way, in which we visit the lost and unforgiven of Chinese history, that give the novel its real meaning….the knotty truths of China’s past are habitually ironed out by ‘official’ historiography, whether it is compiled by the communists or shot in Technicolor by western filmmakers. The result is a collective memory shot through with holes, and Dai’s pantheon of anti-heroes and forgotten souls is an attempt to patch the gaps….Once on a Moonless Night evokes the past with all the eerie clarity of a dream, its outlines blurred, but every tiny, telling detail extraordinarily alive. Anyone in search of a brief history of China would do well to begin right here.” - Margaret Hillenbrand, Financial Times “Once on a Moonless Night takes the reader deeper, into stories within stories and myths within myths about China’s real and imaginary past….Startling undercurrents sway this mysterious narrative: Dai Sijie’s inventiveness enfolds it in some extreme stories….show how language, which we (and many modern Chinese) think of as free, may be treacherous and incomplete….this shy, complex novel, which speaks its concerns so quietly, remains a forceful lament, infused with incident and dramatic storytelling.” - Julian Evans, The Daily Telegraph “Dai Sijie is a wonderful storyteller….Once on a Moonless Night is full of tales within tales and worlds within worlds, ranging from ancient Chinese empires through communist China to modern Beijing….Everything in all these interwoven tales is extreme, from intellectual obsession to the cruelty of empresses, from the mountain landscapes to cabbages….Sijie writes wonderful descriptions….There is always a sense of the pressure of numbers of people and things, which seems to provoke in the characters a ferocious determination to be individuals, to make their own fates, single-mindedly. Places and events are shocking….the reader feels a readerly excitement, even pleasure, as he or she is swept along from disaster to disaster.” - As Byatt, The Guardian “remarkable….the detail of the novel is so enthralling, the descriptions of old Peking so vivid, the picture of the labour camp and the lives of the wretched prisoners so compelling — worthy to set beside Solzhenitsyn’s portrayal of the Gulag….an evocation of lost civilizations, of the artistic inheritance of China, and of Buddhist philosophy. For the Western reader this is as magical as it is strange….Its evocation of the distant world of devoted Chinese scholarship and dying artistry is lovingly and enchantingly done, while the contrast with the brutal politics of Communist China and its contempt for decency and human life is as memorable as it is disturbing. It’s a novel which demands effort from the reader, but the effort is richly rewarded.” - Allan Massie, The Scotsman Praise from France: “Erudite, complex, ambitious, the best novel by the celebrated Dai Sijie....a sophisticated and urgent book.” - Livres Hebdo “an homage to language…an erudite novel filled with poetry...and wit” - Le Figaro “Throughout the book, Dai Sijie mixes the splendor, culture and scholarship of…ancient China with the horror of contemporary China.” - Le Quotidien “A beautiful meditation on language and man.” - La vie |
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