
a book
Soul Mountain
Gao Xingjian · 2009 · 530 pages
A writer flees Beijing's Communist authorities and embarks on a mythical quest through rural China in a "playful monster of a book" by a Nobel Prize winner ( The New York Times Book Review). In 1983 Chinese playwright, critic, fiction writer, and painter Gao Xingjian was diagnosed with lung cancer and prepared for imminent death. But six weeks later, a second examination revealed the cancer was gone, and he was thrown back into the world of the living. Faced with a repressive cultural environment and the threat of a spell in a prison farm, Gao fled Beijing and began a journey of 15,000 kilometers over a period of five months. The result of this epic voyage of discovery is Soul Mountain. A bold, lyrical, prodigious novel, Soul Mountain probes the human soul with an uncommon directness and candor. Interwoven with a myriad of stories and countless memorable characters—from venerable Daoist masters and Buddhist nuns to mythical Wild Men, deadly Qichun snakes, and farting buses—is the narrator's poignant inner journey and search for freedom. "A true work of great literature." — Los Angeles Times Book Review "Spellbinding . . . Gao Xingjian's masterpiece expresses sorrow and anger, wonder and confusion, humor and metaphysics, lust and tenderness, and a profound longing for meaning and freedom." — Booklist "If a successful novelist is one who tells us something new about the human spirit and a successful novel transports us to another world, then Gao and Soul Mountain have succeeded spectacularly." — The Washington Post Book World
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Geetanjali Shree
“Gao Xingjian’s long languid meditation, Soul Mountain, ventures out on an exploration of the mythical soul mountain. It moves at an incredibly slow pace, bringing time to a virtual standstill, focusing with complete concentration on a particular place and moment in time. To tell the story of myth or history or love or loss, enriching our understanding of human life and the world around us. I meander on with it in my own exploration for the true – and mythical – soul mountain.”↗