Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Red Sorghum
Red Sorghum: A Novel of China | Mo Yan
8 posts | 11 read | 13 to read
The acclaimed novel of love and resistance during late 1930s China by Mo Yan, winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize in LiteratureSpanning three generations, this novel of family and myth is told through a series of flashbacks that depict events of staggering horror set against a landscape of gemlike beauty, as the Chinese battle both Japanese invaders and each other in the turbulent 1930s. A legend in China, where it won major literary awards and inspired an Oscar-nominated film directed by Zhang Yimou, Red Sorghum is a book in which fable and history collide to produce fiction that is entirely newand unforgettable.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
KCofKaysville
post image

Found this at a thriftstore and will read it next. Saw Chinese film several years ago. In my TBR stack.

KCofKaysville I am bailing out on this one. Violence is just too gruesome for me 3y
27 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
Kaag
post image
Pickpick

Red Sorghum provides an unflinching look at rural China in the 1930s, where bands of marauders, Japanese soldiers, and packs of wild dogs are all vying for the title of most vicious Sorghum Lord. The story is non-sequential and told in flashbacks, while at times laugh-out-loud funny, it is relentlessly and unhesitatingly brutal, with a delightfully weird twisted love tale of the narrator‘s grandparents. One of the best novels I‘ve read in awhile.

quote
Kaag
post image

review
curiousparable
Mehso-so

A literary masterpiece in many ways, especially in regards to author's ability to describe the fields, the sorghum and the natural environment of north eastern China. It's also a very graphic and violent account of the past, exaggerated deliberately but not over the top. Overall, I enjoyed it, I felt like I was watching a movie when I was reading it, very intense.

LitsyWelcomeWagon Welcome to Litsy! Hope these #Litsytips by @RaimeyGallant http://bit.ly/litsytips and #LitsyHowTo videos: goo.gl/UrCpoU are helpful. There‘s so many fun things to do: book exchanges, buddy reads, photo challenges and more! #LitsyWelcomeWagon 5y
RaimeyGallant Welcome! 5y
3 likes2 comments
quote
RealLifeReading
post image

“The ninth day of the eighth lunar month, 1939. My father, a bandit‘s offspring who had passed his fifteenth birthday, was joining the forces of Commander Yu Zhan‘ao, a man destined to become a legendary hero, to ambush a Japanese convoy on the Jiao-Ping highway. Grandma, a padded jacket over her shoulders, saw them to the edge of the village. “Stop here,” Commander Yu ordered her. She stopped.”
#firstlinesofbooksunread

Expandingbookshelf I loved this book! 6y
RealLifeReading @Expandingbookshelf glad to hear it! Did you watch the movie too? 6y
Expandingbookshelf @RealLifeReading I didn‘t even know there was a movie 😱 I‘ll remedy this ASAP 6y
99 likes3 stack adds3 comments
blurb
Violetta
post image

May #bookhaul number 2: Chinese and Korean books. Three at the top: Mo Yan's Red Sorghum; Yu Hua's Chronicle of Blood Merchant and Brothers. The one at the bottom is monumental (900 pages with all the comments and appendices!) XIIIth century work by Buddhist monk on ancient Korean history named Samguk Yusa. #TBR #bookshopping #chinese #korean

tammysue Nice! 👏🏻 6y
31 likes2 comments
blurb
miss_almayra
post image

my wishlist since he won nobel prize. #justarrive #newbooks #bookworm #bookaholic

blurb
EricaReads
post image

@RealLifeReading #somethingforsept #septphotochallenge September Photo Challenge Day 4: POC Author. I read pretty diversely but mostly library books. But I bought this at an airport a few years ago and haven't gotten around to reading it yet. I'll be reading it as part of a reading challenge later this year.

15 likes1 stack add