Latest Review: Brothers by Yu Hua
If things go right, I think we’ll be running five reviews this week—which definitely makes up for the one we skipped last week.
Up first is Yu Hua’s Brothers, a very long novel, very ambitious novel about two boys growing up in China during the period of the Cultural Revolution and the economic boom that followed.
The novel opens with a frame story of Baldy Li, Liu Town鈥檚 most successful businessman, sitting on a gold-plated toilet seat, dreaming of spending 鈥渢wenty million U.S. dollars to purchase a ride on a Russian Federation space shuttle for a tour of outer space.鈥 He begins reminiscing about his now-deceased brother Song Gang, and about the time when, as a young boy, Baldy Li peeked under the partition in the public toilet and saw five women鈥檚 butts, including the butt of Lin Hong, the most desired woman in Liu Town.
From that point on, the novel advances in a linear fashion, describing how Baldy Li figures out how to sell his description of Lin Hong鈥檚 bottom to various townsmen for bowls of noodles, of how Baldy鈥檚 mother remarried and Song Gang comes into Baldy鈥檚 life, of the horrors of the Cultural Revolution, and of how Baldy Li goes on to become one of the richest people in China, capable of spending millions on a trip to space.
Along the way, there are endless reverses of fortune鈥擲ong Gang ends up marrying Lin Hong, Baldy Li鈥檚 grand schemes bankrupt him and lead him to collecting trash鈥攁nd numerous side stories that give this novel a sort of Dickensian quality, allowing Yu Hua to really sketch out Chinese society both during and after Mao. The epic scope of the novel, along with Hua鈥檚 ability to shift from warm humor to sheer horror in the same sentence, are the real high points of this book. It鈥檚 easy to get sucked into Hua鈥檚 world, even when the reader knows exactly what鈥檚 going to happen next, which is true a good deal of the time.
Click here to read the full review.

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