Village of Stone
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #89608 in Books
- Published on: 2005-08-04
- Binding: Paperback
- 192 pages
Editorial Reviews
Doris Lessing
...What could have been a misery of a story has the mysterious charm of a fairy tale or a legend.
Synopsis
Coral and her frisbee-obsessed boyfriend, Red live on the ground floor of a cramped tower block in the megalopolis that is Beijing. The very epitome of disaffected, unfulfilled youth, their already fragile existence is shattered by the arrival of a mysterious fishy package - as the smells of the sea flood her home, Coral is transported back to a traumatic childhood dominated by solitude, fear and shame. Born on a boat during a storm, and orphaned soon after, Coral was raised by silent grandparents amongst the stern and superstitious fishermen of the remote Village of Stone. Shunned from birth as a bringer of ill fortune, and exposed to the malevolent, threatening forces of a closed-off-society. Coral immersed herself in the minutiae of the landscape around her. At fifteen, she escaped to the big city and shut the door on the darkness of her past. As the narrative darts between the manic sprawl of Beijing and the hypnotic rhymes of a tiny coastal village, our narrator struggles to navigate a path through painful and hidden memories of a time of shame, and a loss of innocence.
From the Publisher
'Reading it is rather like finding yourself in a dream: "once upon a time..." People are going to like this book very much' Doris Lessing
Customer Reviews
Superb Read
I was made aware of this author when I listened to Women's Hour on BBC Radio 4. Yes, I do listen to such programs now and again! Not only the fact that the author is Chinese but she has the family name "Guo", which is the same as my wife's (Lixin Guo).
It's probably understandable that I have a particular curiosity about all things Chinese but when the author is serialised on Radio 4 and has the same name as my wife, I just had to read her works.
Even if you have no direct connection with China this book makes a beautiful read. It has its tragic parts but despite them it is just so optimistic. Written in an autobiographical style, although I don't know how much of the story is biographical, it was none the less a book I really enjoyed reading.





