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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Mo Yan published by this site and its partners.

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    Jan 4, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Mo Yan fires verbal cannons in 'POW!'

    While the jury is still out as to whether the Chinese writer Mo Yan, who is said to have been toeing the party line, truly deserves the Nobel Prize for Literature, there is little doubt that his novel “POW!” — with its Rabelaisian carnivalesque language and surrealist narration — rightly belongs among the best of world literature. First published in 2003 as “Forty-one Bombards” (“Sishiyi Pao”), Mo's novel in the English version, rendered beautifully and ingeniously by Howard Goldblatt, has acquired a poetic, or rather, onomatopoetic title: “POW!” True to the spirit of the word, readers of “POW!” are bombarded page after page by the blaring force of a story of carnivorous excess that bares China's soiled bottom.
    While the jury is still out as to whether the Chinese writer Mo Yan, who is said to have been toeing the party line, truly deserves the Nobel Prize for Literature, there is little doubt that his novel “POW!” — with its Rabelaisian...

    Tags: Entertainment Events, Prisoners and Detainees, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Arts and Culture, Authors

  2. Dec 23, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  3. 2012: From Arab Spring to early winter

    Meteorologists know seasons are predictable. In the weather world, spring is always followed by summer. But the political world is different. Spring can proceed to summer, or it can lead to a sudden onset of winter.
    Meteorologists know seasons are predictable. In the weather world, spring is always followed by summer. But the political world is different. Spring can proceed to summer, or it can lead to a sudden onset of winter. That was the case this year in the...

    Tags: Africa, Government, Crime, Law and Justice, Justice and Rights, Hosni Mubarak

  4. Dec 21, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. The buzz in Paris: What books do international writers recommend?

    Few people read more literature that’s written outside their own borders than the French. And if you want to get a really good sense about what’s out there in the vast multilingual world of books, there’s no better place to look than a...

    Tags: The Holocaust (1934-1945), Fiction, French Literature, Book, Arts and Culture

  6. Dec 17, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. Is Mo Yan courageous, or is he a patsy?

    Salman Rushdie thinks Mo Yan is a patsy of China’s Communist government. I respect Rushdie's work, and his own courage as a defender of artistic freedom. But I'm not sure he's right about Mo Yan.
    Salman Rushdie thinks Mo Yan is a patsy of China’s Communist government. I respect Rushdie's work, and his own courage as a defender of artistic freedom. But I'm not sure he's right about Mo Yan. Mo accepted the Nobel Prize for Literature this...

    Tags: Authors, Government, Literature, Garlic, Politics

  8. Dec 14, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. The New York Review of Books versus Salman Rushdie

    For lovers of good literary controversy, Salman Rushdie is the gift that keeps on giving.
    For lovers of good literary controversy, Salman Rushdie is the gift that keeps on giving. A few months after the publication of Rushdie’s memoir “Joseph Anton,” the New York Review of Books (where they specialize in this sort of thing)...

    Tags: Arts and Culture, Authors, Literature, Pakistan

  10. Dec 7, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Remembering John Lennon through his letters (and postcards)

    The night <a href="http://www.johnlennon.com/">John Lennon</a> died, I was at a Bruce Springsteen show in Philadelphia. The next evening, Springsteen would open with a cover of &ldquo;Twist and Shout,&rdquo; but on that fateful night, in the&nbsp; pre-cellphone, pre-Internet era, my friends and I spent the moment of Lennon&rsquo;s murder blissfully oblivious &mdash; until we came out after the concert to find the news burning through the parking lot like a grass fire.
    The night John Lennon died, I was at a Bruce Springsteen show in Philadelphia. The next evening, Springsteen would open with a cover of “Twist and Shout,” but on that fateful night, in the  pre-cellphone, pre-Internet era, my friends and I...

    Tags: Radio Industry, Entertainment, Music

  12. Dec 6, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. What a bummer: Nobel laureate Mo Yan defends censorship

    Chinese author Mo Yan was announced in October as the recipient of the Nobel Prize in literature; he's in Sweden now and will be presented with the award Monday. It was at a news conference in Stockholm that Mo made his disappointing statements in support of censorship.
    Chinese author Mo Yan was announced in October as the recipient of the Nobel Prize in literature; he's in Sweden now and will be presented with the award Monday. It was at a news conference in Stockholm that Mo made his disappointing statements in support...

    Tags: Liu Xiaobo, Fiction, Entertainment Events, Arts and Culture, Censorship

  14. Dec 6, 2012 |Story| AP Broadcast
  15. Nobel literature winner says censorship necessary

    STOCKHOLM (AP) — This year's Nobel literature winner Mo Yan, who has been criticized for his cozy relationship with China's Communist Party, defended censorship Thursday as something as necessary as airport security checks. He also suggested he...

    Tags: Civil Rights, Crime, Law and Justice, Justice and Rights, Human Rights, Science and Technology

  16. Nov 24, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  17. Yan Lianke satirizes contemporary China

    In 2010, before I visited my late father's native village in China's central province of Henan, a friend recommended that I read Yan Lianke's books to prepare for my trip. Yan, one of China's eminent and most controversial novelists and satirists —...

    Tags: Physical Disabilities, Arts and Culture, Trips and Vacations, China, Snow Storms

  18. Oct 26, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  19. A day in the life of a zombie writer

    I climb out of the car, step into damp October leaves and stare up at the Logan Square apartment building across the street. A chill rushes up the street. I notice a man standing in the front yard, shuffling back and forth. He does not appear rabid. He appears to be in his mid-30s, with black-frame glasses, maybe a graduate student. He is behind a black fence, and as I take a tentative step in his direction, I realize: He is Scott Kenemore, zombie writer, the most prolific zombie writer in a subgenre I had assumed was dead.
    I climb out of the car, step into damp October leaves and stare up at the Logan Square apartment building across the street. A chill rushes up the street. I notice a man standing in the front yard, shuffling back and forth. He does not appear rabid. He...

    Tags: Genres, Chicago Mayor, Fiction, Ghouls and Zombies (supernatural entities), Authors

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