Reading this Chinese classic now
"Whenever Liujin heard geese at night, she couldn‘t hold back her tears. It was clearly a cry of freedom, but it sounded to her like the dread that precedes execution."
"Whenever Liujin heard geese at night, she couldn‘t hold back her tears. It was clearly a cry of freedom, but it sounded to her like the dread that precedes execution."
It's so hard for me to give up a book, especially one I've heard great things about, but I'm just not even enjoying this. I know it's experimental but I'm on pg 110 and none of it, almost literally none of it, makes sense. I read pages and have no idea what happened, whether it was real, if the characters are real people, if some of them are actually multiple people, if things 20 years apart are happening at the same time . . . It's so confusing.
And now shades of green for @LibrarianJen ?
I'm tagging @readsusieread for a stack in pink ombré ?
Experimental fiction is more miss than hit with me, usually. But I am really getting into Chinese lit. I have been curious about this novel for a while now.
http://blog.lareviewofbooks.org/essays/xue-generis-can-xue-dangers-literary-exce...
This is the latest haul, so newest #TBR. I need to read and review at least 3 of these for the store in February, plus find a #nonfiction2017 for @Ebooksandcooks challenge. Once again I am overwhelmed by choice. #feistyfeb