Corpse Walker: Real Life Stories: China from the Bottom Up [NOOK Book]

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Overview

The Corpse Walker introduces us to regular men and women at the bottom of Chinese society, most of whom have been battered by life but have managed to retain their dignity: a professional mourner, a human trafficker, a public toilet manager, a leper, a grave robber, and a Falung Gong practitioner, among others. By asking challenging questions with respect and empathy, Liao Yiwu managed to get his subjects to talk openly and sometimes hilariously about their lives, desires, and vulnerabilities, creating a book that is an instance par excellence of what was once upon a time called “The New Journalism.” The Corpse Walker reveals a fascinating aspect of modern China, describing the lives of normal Chinese citizens in ways ...
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Overview

The Corpse Walker introduces us to regular men and women at the bottom of Chinese society, most of whom have been battered by life but have managed to retain their dignity: a professional mourner, a human trafficker, a public toilet manager, a leper, a grave robber, and a Falung Gong practitioner, among others. By asking challenging questions with respect and empathy, Liao Yiwu managed to get his subjects to talk openly and sometimes hilariously about their lives, desires, and vulnerabilities, creating a book that is an instance par excellence of what was once upon a time called “The New Journalism.” The Corpse Walker reveals a fascinating aspect of modern China, describing the lives of normal Chinese citizens in ways that constantly provoke and surprise.


From the Trade Paperback edition.

Editorial Reviews

Da Chen
Liao Yiwu got in trouble, to put it mildly, for speaking in his own voice. He spent four years in a Chinese prison for circulating a tape of himself reading "Massacre," his underground poem about the killings in Tiananmen Square in 1989. In The Corpse Walker, the 49-year-old poet and author, who still lives in China and struggles against censorship, speaks through others: He gives us the oral histories of 27 people from Sichuan province, his birthplace in southwestern China. But the resulting collective portrait is as full of indignation as his own poetry.
—The Washington Post
From The Critics
…an industrious, well-crafted recording of oral histories, almost all from the southwestern province of Sichuan…Most books about China published in the West plant their standards at the best-selling poles of enchantment or awful mystery, but The Corpse Walker is more subtle. Its collective tone is not mournful but, rather, full of forbearance and forgiveness.
—The New York Times

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780307377180
  • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
  • Publication date: 4/15/2008
  • Sold by: Random House
  • Format: eBook
  • Sales rank: 261,996
  • File size: 402 KB
  • Items ship to U.S, APO/FPO and U.S. Protectorate addresses.

Meet the Author

Liao Yiwu is a poet, novelist, and screenwriter. In 1989, he published an epic poem, "Massacre," that condemned the killings in Tiananmen Square and for which he spent four years in prison. His works include Testimonials and Report on China's Victims of Injustice. In 2003, he received a Human Rights Watch Hellman-Hammett Grant, and in 2007, he received a Freedom to Write Award from the Independent Chinese PEN Center. He lives in China.

Wen Huang is a writer and freelance journalist whose articles and translations have appeared in The Wall Street Journal Asia, the Chicago Tribune, the South China Morning Post, The Christian Science Monitor, and The Paris Review.


From the Trade Paperback edition.

Read an Excerpt

Foreword

To hear a new voice is one of the great excitements that a book can offer--and through Liao Yiwu we hear more than two dozen original voices that have a great deal to say. Liao is at once an unflinching observer and recorder, a shoe-leather reporter and an artful storyteller, an oral historian and deft mimic, a folklorist and satirist. Above all, he is a medium for whole muzzled swathes of Chinese society that the Party would like to pretend do not exist: hustlers and drifters, outlaws and street performers, the officially renegade and the physically handicapped, those who deal with human waste and with the wasting of humans, artists and shamans, crooks, even cannibals--and every one of them speaks more honestly than the official chronicles of Chinese life that are put out by the state in the name of "the people."

Liao was shaped as a writer by the harshest of experiences: he nearly starved to death as a child and his father was branded an enemy of the people; he was thrown in jail for writing poems that spoke truthfully about China's Communist Party and he was beaten in jail for refusing to shut up; and he discovered in jail the enormous value of listening to others like him whom the authorities wanted to keep forever unheard. So Liao writes with the courage of a man who knows loss and doesn't fear it. There is nothing to make him take notice like an official injunction against noticing, nothing to make him listen like official deafness, nothing that drives him to make us see than the blindness that Communist officialdom seeks to impose. But it is not merely defiance, and it is hardly political polemic, that drives the vitality of the stories in this collection. What makes Liao's encounters with his characters so powerful is the fact that he clearly delights in their humanity, however twisted its expression, and he shows his respect for his subjects in the most fundamental way: he lets them speak for themselves.

There is no question that Liao Yiwu is one of the most original and remarkable Chinese writers of our time. It is, however, truer to say that he is one of the most original and remarkable writers of our time, and that he is from China. Yes, his language is Chinese, his country and its people are his subject, and his stories originate from intensely local encounters. But even to someone who has never been to China, and who can know Liao's work only through Wen Huang's translations, these stories have an immediacy and an intimacy that crosses all boundaries and classifications. They belong to the great common inheritance of world literature.

Liao Yiwu is an original, but it seems a very good bet that writers as diverse as Mark Twain and Jack London, Nikolai Gogol and George Orwell, François Rabelais and Primo Levi would have recognized him at once as a brother in spirit and in letters. He is a ringmaster of the human circus, and his work serves as a powerful reminder--as vital and necessary in open societies lulled by their freedoms as it is in closed societies where telling truthful stories can be a crime--that it is not only in the visible and noisy wielders of power but equally in the marginalized, overlooked, and unheard that the history of our kind is most tellingly inscribed.

Philip Gourevitch
November 2007


From the Hardcover edition.

Table of Contents

Foreword   Philip Gourevitch     vii
Introduction: The Voice of China's Social Outcasts   Wen Huang     ix
The Professional Mourner     3
The Human Trafficker     13
The Public Restroom Manager     20
The Corpse Walkers     28
The Leper     40
The Peasant Emperor     50
The Feng Shui Master     61
The Abbot     73
The Composer     93
The Rightist     111
The Retired Official     121
The Former Landowner     135
The Yi District Chief's Wife     146
The Village Teacher     160
The Mortician     173
The Neighborhood Committee Director     182
The Former Red Guard     193
The Counterrevolutionary     203
The Tiananmen Father     214
The Falun Gong Practitioner     230
The Illegal Border Crosser     242
The Grave Robber     254
The Safecracker     267
The Blind Erhu Player     277
The Street Singer     284
The Sleepwalker     298
The Migrant Worker     308
Translator's Acknowledgments     319

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