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The Stolen Bicycle
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
13 posts | 7 read | 16 to read
Six-time Winner of the China Times Open Book Award and Author of the Year, Eslite Bookstore A writer embarks on an epic quest in search of his missing fathers stolen bicycle and soon finds himself caught up in the strangely intertwined stories of Lin Wang, the oldest elephant who ever lived, the soldiers who fought in the jungles of South-East Asia during the Second World War and the secret worlds of the butterfly handicraft makers and antique bicycle fanatics of Taiwan. The Stolen Bicycle is both a majestic historical novel and a profound, startlingly intimate meditation on memory, family and home. Award-winning novelist Wu Ming-Yi is also an artist, designer, photographer, literary professor, butterfly scholar, environmental activist, traveller and blogger, and is widely considered the leading writer of his generation in his native Taiwan. A long-time resident of Taipei, Darryl Sterk has interests in Taiwans local literature and indigenous cultures. He translated the first of Wu Ming-Yis novels to be published in English, The Man with the Compound Eyes. PRAISE FOR WU MING-YI AND THE STOLEN BICYCLE A work of astonishing energy, in which Wu beautifully touches on loss, life and death, fate and destiny, establishing emotional connections between memory and objects, and between the natural world and war... a novel that provides comfort and reconciliation from a wounded past. Thinking Taiwan The novel, inspired by his love for bicycles and Taiwanese history, brings readers back to a simpler time when life moved more slowly and people spent more time face-to-face with friends and neighbors. Riding a bike allowed people to appreciate and digest the details of the world around them. Taipei Times A profoundly moving novel, such is the power of words and depth of feeling by Taiwanese author Wu Ming-Yi...He turns events into linguistic gold with his poetic, dreamlike language. Good Reading A visionary ride through flame-scorched lands and machine-clutching trees and metamorphoses into metal and earth..."World is crazier and more of it than we think,/Incorrigibly plural", Louis MacNeice wrote...Multiply that by 10 or so and you get some sense of Wus astonishing, often-affecting kaleidoscope. NZ Listener Unusual insights and vividly observed detail abound in this witty and sensitive story. Toowoomba Chronicle PRAISE FOR THE MAN WITH THE COMPOUND EYES Brilliant. . . . A haunting and evocative tale, beautifully told. Hugh Howey, author of Wool We havent read anything like this novel. Ever. South America gave us magical realismwhat is Taiwan giving us? A new way of telling our new reality, beautiful, entertaining, frightening, preposterous, true. . . . Wu Ming-Yi treats human vulnerability and the worlds vulnerability with fearless tenderness. Ursula K. Le Guin A striking book. . . . It is science fiction . . . in the way that the best Margaret Atwood books are science fiction. . . . I couldnt put it down. Jason Sheehan, NPR Lyrical, haunting. . . . A heady mix of science fiction, fantasy, environmental fable and magical realism, the author had to create a genre entirely new for this singular, captivating book. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Astonishing. . . . A wonderful novel. The Independent (London) An earnest, politically conscious novel, anchored in ecological concerns and Taiwanese identity. . . . Beyond the books ecological and scientific attributes, you can see a deft novelists hand at work. Tash Aw, The Guardian (London) Imaginative and moving. Financial Times [Ming-Yi is] reminiscent of Haruki Murakami, twisting the dreamlike into the curiously credible. Times Literary Supplement (London) Rich, dense and dripping with life. The book sings in the key of fable, but with the timbre of reality. Charles Yu, author of How to Live Safely in a Fictional Universe An entrancing, multi-faceted elegy. . . . [Ming-Yi writes with] a poets approach. . . . Full of painful, wonderful beauty. The Rumpus Beautifully written and beautifully translated. . . . [Ming-Yi] guides us to see the entirety of experience as bumping flotsam in an unending ocean of life colliding and making a mess of things or making something new. . . . Lyric, simple, soft, the story crests and recedes and comes back again. The Bloomington Sun-Current [Ming-Yis] rollercoaster of a story is about wilderness, wildness, wonderment, love. . . . [The Man with the Compound Eyes includes] perhaps the best writing to ever come out of a Taiwan novel. Taipei Times A gift. . . . Ming-Yi is a naturalist as well as a storyteller, and it is perhaps his greatest achievement that this novel creates a sense of solidarity not only between his human characters, but also between [the] humans and the animals and plants he describes with such fidelity. FullStop Offering a heady dose of realism, surrealism, and magic realism, with several shots of allegory, award-winning Chinese author Wu [Ming-Yi] offers a work for literary fiction readers, but not in the snobbish sense. Its really for any curious, intelligent reader. STARRED review, Library Journal
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TheSpineView
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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#QuotsyApr21 @TK-421
Prompt: Antique

TK-421 I love this! 💕 3y
TheSpineView @TK-421 👍❤ 3y
61 likes2 comments
review
rockpools
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Bailedbailed

Sad to say I‘m bailing on this one, at least for the time being. A glitchy ebook and a past-it‘s-sell-by-date e-reader, combined with quite a slow-moving plot and (surprise!) a few too many stolen bicycles meant I never really sunk into this one. However, the opening scene was haunting- I want to know what was going on- so I may come back to it if/when I track down a ‘clean‘ copy.

#readaroundtheworld #taiwan

Verity You gotta do what you gotta do! 4y
Cathythoughts Oh that‘s disappointing when the opening scene sounds so good 😳🙄 4y
rockpools @Verity Yep 😕. Think this was one I really wanted to like, but ho hum! 4y
rockpools @Cathythoughts One day, when I can have a good run at it, I might try again. 4y
51 likes4 comments
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rockpools
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Starting The Stolen Bicycle for #readaroundtheworld #Taiwan .

One chapter in and I‘m loving it - beautifully descriptive with a menacing turn already. And scarecrows.

But it has a shockingly low Litsy rating, and few actual reviews, so we‘ll see... My only gripe right now is that my ebook has technical and formatting issues!

KT1432 Ugh I hate when there are digital formatting issues! 4y
rockpools @lele1432 I keep getting stuck on page 4! It goes 4, 5, 6, 4 in a loop. Weird!! Have to go to the contents page and jump out to the text 🤷🏻‍♀️ 4y
KT1432 That is strange! Beautiful artwork though lol 4y
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BookwormM That sounds like a nightmare I have nearly finished my book and still unsure how I feel about it 4y
rockpools @BookwormM That sounds very heavy! 4y
BookwormM If wasn‘t my first choice it was the only reasonably priced book that fit my criteria the others were too expensive 4y
rockpools @BookwormM I do find that. Every month umpteen more books that look amazing- and the one the library has. Still, we find some fantastic ones between us! (edited) 4y
50 likes1 stack add7 comments
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Lindy
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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When asked about the supernatural elements in his writing, Wu Ming-Li answered that literary critics like to interpret his work as magic realism, but Wu doesn‘t think it is. He thinks he is showing that we live in a world that contains wonders. #VWF2019

40 likes4 stack adds
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mreads
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Leftcoastzen Nice cover! 5y
sudi Love this one 😍 5y
49 likes2 comments
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shawnmooney
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Redwritinghood 💕💕 6y
45 likes1 comment
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shawnmooney
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Oooh, the plot thickens!

#QuoteOfTheDay

saresmoore I‘ll be watching for your review of this because I think it‘s one I‘ll like! 6y
shawnmooney @saresmoore It‘s a loose baggy monster, but I‘m loving so much of it! 6y
AceOnRoam I have this reserved on Overdrive....waiting, waiting! 6y
38 likes3 comments
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shawnmooney
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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(She is working at a butterfly collage factory in Taiwan. I haven‘t been able to figure out the timeframe yet for this new narrative in the novel, but it may well be during the Japanese occupation. The collages are made by dismembering the poor butterflies and using parts of their wings to make the art. Google tells me that this was also done in Europe centuries ago. It would totally be frowned on in the modern era, hey?)

#QuoteOfTheDay

LeahBergen That‘s some wonderful imagery. 6y
38 likes1 comment
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Emilymdxn
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Pickpick

Often odd, sometimes a little heavy going (I can only take so many bicycle facts, and skipped over some animal cruelty) but the writing was so unfailingly beautiful, so well observed, I had to make this a pick. I was noting down so many beautiful lines from it. I really felt like it helped me understand something about Taiwan and I‘m grateful for books that help me do that. #litworldgb2018 #manbookerinternational2018

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Emilymdxn
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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#25infive update one day in! 6/25 hours yesterday.

Yesterday I listened to my audiobook for 4 hours at work and then read my kindle for around two hours in the evening (maybe a bit more than 2 hours but I‘m trying to be strict with myself). I was hoping to plough on and finish The Stolen Bicycle but my long distance bf was suddenly able to call and I wasn‘t gonna pass that up!

JoScho That is an awesome start! 6y
Emilymdxn @JoScho thanks! I‘ve got quite a busy weekend so gotta get my hours in early, listening to audio at work definitely makes a big difference to me! (edited) 6y
Andrew65 A great start. 👏 6y
20 likes3 comments
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Simona
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Mehso-so

Yes, the story is about a stolen bicycle. This is the main thread of the narrative, and author create around this personal family history and the history of Taiwan. I like the idea, but unfortunately, not the execution. ⭐️⭐️⭐️

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Simona
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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Vegetables noodle #soup and a new e-book for the weekend.

#marchMunchies

RaimeyGallant Nice! 6y
89 likes1 stack add1 comment
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HardcoverHearts
The Stolen Bicycle | Wu Ming-Yi
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This is the first year in eons that I haven‘t even heard of one of the Man Booker Long List books! Where did these novels come from?? What about you all? Did you know about or read any of these last year?

BookishMe Exactly the same here! All are unknown to me. Right now, I am busy reading to look them up, let alone add to my TBR 6y
HardcoverHearts @BookishMe I am really excited! I have a small book club where we read the short list of awards (National Book Award and Man Booker, specifically) so I am really excited to see what makes the cut! 6y
Dogearedcopy The Man Booker International always has the more exotic and obscure (to Western readers) than the "regular" Man Booker lists (which are all English language in origin.) I don't know if I've ever read a title from the International lists! Maybe next year, I'll set up a personal reading challenge to correct that... (edited) 6y
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Caroline2 Agreed! I haven't heard of any of them?! 😳 6y
Caroline2 OH tell a lie, I've heard good things about Frankenstein in Baghdad! 👍🏻 6y
Lacythebookworm I love Jenny Erpenbeck and Han Kang! Pleased to see them both on the list. 6y
Lindy @Lacythebookworm I‘m next in line at the library for Go Went Gone but I‘ve paused it while I get through what I‘ve got out now. So many books... 6y
HardcoverHearts @Dogearedcopy OH!! I had no idea they had an additional prize for translated work. (I have no idea how I didn‘t know that... 😳🙄) Thank you! That makes much more sense. But now I am feeling clearly deficient in my reading of translated material! 6y
HardcoverHearts @Caroline2 Good to know! I mean, overall I trust the Man Booker judges so I will be checking all of the short list out, when they get to that stage. Hopefully that book makes the cut! 😉 6y
HardcoverHearts @Lacythebookworm Thanks for the recommendation! I will check them out! 6y
Dogearedcopy @HardcoverHearts I felt the same way when I walked into City Lights Bookstore! Up front are all the Anglo books but in the next room to the right are the international/translated books. I felt very small reading-wise as I realized how much more there is to explore! 6y
HardcoverHearts @Dogearedcopy City Lights is intense! It‘s so nice to know I‘m not alone! 😂 6y
25 likes12 comments