Wild Kids :Two Novels About Growing Up - Modern Chinese Literature from Taiwan
Wild Kids :Two Novels About Growing Up - Modern Chinese Literature from Taiwan
paperback | English
Published:
15 April, 2002
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9780231120975 |
| ISBN10 | 0231120974 |
| Number Of Pages | 272 |
| Item Weight | 1000 g |
| Publisher / Reseller | Columbia University Press |
| Format | paperback |
Media Reviews
Chang is an astute observer and perceptive cultural critic...English readers will easily identify with the sentiments and circumstances portrayed by Chang and skillfully translated by Berry. -- Sylvia Li-chun Lin, University of Colorado, Denver World Literature Today Ghoulish, playful, totally subversive. -- Emily Gordon Newsday In two jaunty, disturbing novellas from Taiwan... Chang Ta-chun presents us with disaffected adolescents who roam city streets, complain about school, fantasize about gangster life, and wear Chicago Bulls T-shirts. -- Maureen McLane The New York Times Book Review Chang writes accessible, knowing and very funny fiction about youth and screwed-up families-some of the best of its kind... My Kid Sister... could be America's next teen classic. Publishers Weekly It's a considerable feat to have kids spout off about existentialism and not have them sound pretentious. Or high. -- Barbara Spindel Spin Wild Kids turned out to be not only the window on Taiwan I was looking for, but also a quick and enjoyable summer read. It is not without depth nor short of something to sink your teeth into. -- Jonathan S. Landreth VirtualChina.com This novel will inevitably invite comparisons with the classic The Catcher in the Rye. Philippines Today Churning out political thrillers, martial arts short stories, hard-boiled detective mysteries, a sci-fi, collection, and just about every other genre since 1976, Chang Ta-chun is a literary celebrity in Taiwan. -- Martin Wong Giant Robot Magazine
GoodReads Reviews
Author's Bio
Chang Ta-chun is among Taiwan's premier contemporary authors. His prolific and varied output has transformed him from a cult literary figure into a virtual celebrity in Taiwan, where he produces and hosts a television program on literature. He has published twenty-one books since his emergence on the literary scene almost two decades ago and has taught at the Iowa Writer's Workshop. He lives in Taiwan and maintains a home in Iowa, where he spends several months of the year.Michael Berry is a doctoral candidate in modern Chinese literature at Columbia University. He is the translator of several works, including the forthcoming novel To Live by Yu Hua.