Waiting: A Novel
C**Y
A Literary Masterpiece, Political Allegory, and Love Story…But It's Not an Easy Read
This book is a real dichotomy.On the one hand, it is a literary masterpiece, a political allegory, and a love story that won the 1999 National Book Award for Fiction, the 2000 PEN/Faulkner Award, and was a finalist for the 2000 Pulitzer Prize.On the other hand, the title is quite apt. The reader will be kept waiting…and waiting…and waiting for something to happen. It doesn't. This is a relatively short book that feels quite long.At its core, this is a love story. But it's so much more than that. Written by Ha Jin, this is the story of Lin Kong, a man who watches as his life passes him by. Forced into a loveless arranged marriage at an early age, Lin becomes a doctor and works in the big city of Muji, while his wife, Shuyu, and their daughter, Hua, live in rural Goose Village. Every summer he visits them. Every summer he asks Shuyu for a divorce, even making it as far as appearing before a judge. But every summer his request is denied. The impetus for the divorce is simple: At the army hospital, Lin has a girlfriend named Manna Wu. Because adultery is absolutely forbidden by Communist Party, Lin and Manna have a platonic relationship. What happens when Lin is finally granted the divorce after 18 years is at the crux of the novel's ultimate premise.Lin's life is defined by waiting for everything he can't seem to achieve, and he blames it all on everyone but himself—the Chinese government, the army's regulations, his gossiping coworkers, and society's unwritten, but stringent, rules—when it's actually his own inability to take the risks needed to fully live and love.The story takes place over several decades from the early 1960s to the mid-1980s during the height of the Chinese cultural revolution. The novel deftly contrasts life in a remote, rural village with life in the city, and also portrays the strict control that the Chinese government had over its citizens' lives and freedoms.This is a deeply tragic, disturbing, and sorrowful story of a flawed man who waits his entire life for…nothing. And there is an important life lesson in that. Still, this is not an easy read so be prepared for that.
R**D
The title says it all
I really struggled with this book and I can’t tell if it’s a testament to the effectiveness of the storytelling or just a bad book. It is a tedious read. And I found it difficult to like any of the characters. But I have the sense that this was the authors aim, and if that’s the case it’s brilliantly executed. I mean, the title is called “waiting” and that’s precisely what it feels like to read it: you’re just waiting for something interesting to happen, or a character to actually do something. About 3/4 into the book I just set it down and I have yet to pick it up again, but my plan is to finish it and try to understand what made it worthy of its awards. Maybe it will become a work I ultimately appreciate. In the meantime…yuck.
W**R
A long time coming
A long time comingA hard story to read, how interesting can it be to read about a character that is put off by official sanctions and an ineffectual nature from marring his beloved for 18 years?Best to remind ones self that Waiting won both the National Book Award in 1999 and the 2000 PEN/ Faulkner Award.Ha Jin takes us to China during the troublesome years of the Mao era and into the early Deng Xiaoping period to see the stressful existence of an Army doctor contorted by his environment constraints and his own inadequacies, and yet by stories end, leaves the reader with enough to linger long over the working of the human condition. Being a Good Man is sometimes not enough.Awards well earned by an author who found his own reasons not to return to China following the events of June 1989.The story was written while a professor of English at Emory University; he formally taught Literature at Boston University.
G**R
Authentic, simple without being simplistic, fine and purposeful storytelling
This was the first book of Ha Jin's that I have read and it won't be the last. One really feels transported to northeastern, "revolutionary" China - specifically to the ways of a small village and a medium-sized town, and the distinctive atmosphere and social types of those places, especially in the 1960s but even up to the 1980s. Along with telling a highly engaging story, he has a gift for describing nature, from insects and birds to trees and the weather. And the story, while making some social commentary such as portrayal of Geng Yeng who would seem to represent the type of unprincipled, egotistic, and ruthless person who could run a factory in modern China, is really more about love. Love, spoken and unspoken, lustful or duty-bound, hidden or open, for appearance-sake or genuine, within the family and outside the family, for an individual's desire or socially useful. When things are at their most complicated, Lin Kong, the main character, reflects how what he really wants is just a peaceful domestic life. All the while, what makes the book most interesting is the ever-present background of communist China and its social mores and rules. For example, one must have approval to leave the countryside to live in the city, approval of your bosses to divorce etc. The book is a work of art in every way and highly recommended!
J**A
Brilliant
Speedy delivery. Have already read this book, but the cat had a little accident on it so I had to buy a new copy. Brilliant book
M**O
Important writer
Great writer.Fabulous book.
C**Y
Chinese book
I liked it very much ,really good if you like chinese stories,would recommend it thanks to Ha Jin
P**R
Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans
The story is set in the period between the sixties and the eighties in communist China, providing an "exotic taste" to it for the western reader. Nevertheless, the existential drama lived by the main characters could be easily transported in any historical period and in any country: people who are afraid of living, will always find an excuse in the social norms in order to avoid a face-off with their own weaknesses.The novel provides simple but effective insights in the thoughts and the emotions of the main characters.Recommended to those interested in the complexity of human relationships and in the meaning of life.
A**R
A journey headed somewhere through nowhere
Do we cherish the cherished without knowing why we cherish? A fascinating tale of shifting sands of desires and associations . Desires spur associations, being associated enfeeble desire till a new want takes shape.
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