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$16.00
Oct 17, 2017 | ISBN 9780804170376
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Oct 25, 2016 | ISBN 9780307911636
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Oct 25, 2016 | ISBN 9781524708405
397 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
“A delicious satire. . . . One of the most unsettling books about the moral dimensions of modern journalism.” —The Washington Post
“Both entertaining and thought-provoking. . . . A powerful vehicle for the truths of our times.” —The Boston Globe
“It feels like a miracle—and a splendid irony—that an immigrant writer can fashion a novel with such quintessentially American themes from the front lines of the Chinese diaspora.” —The Seattle Times
“Savage satire. . . . [Ha Jin] is a writer of simple yet powerful gifts.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Arguably Ha Jin’s most political—and funny—novel yet.” —New York
“Convincing as well as timely. . . . [Has] a powerful moral core.” —The Christian Science Monitor
“The narrative framework is fertile ground for Jin’s brilliant and nuanced political and social observations.” —The Seattle Times
“Jin’s criticism of modern-day Communist China is stunning, easily the best part of an already well-crafted novel. I was reminded of 1984 and the passages Winston and Julia read aloud from The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism.” —Nandini Balial, Los Angeles Review of Books
“Ha Jin only gets better and better. In The Boat Rocker he continues with his supply of unadorned prose, as evocative as Chekhov’s. . . . But he also draws us, so gently that we hardly notice, into some very deep questions, first about Chinese-American identity, then about identity for any person, and then about the value and the risks, for anyone, of living with integrity.” —Perry Link
“Page-turning but profound. . . . The twists and turns of Danlin’s fight with Haili make The Boat Rocker a compelling read, but Jin’s insight into nationalism, patriotism and the true cost of freedom of the press gives the novel depth and brilliance.” —BookPage
“Jin’s conceit is intriguing, even ingenious, and he dazzles with every scene in which his reporter is confronted by hostile forces. . . . Bracing and absorbing, at its heart lurks a chilling message: ‘Truth depends on how you shape and present it.’” —The National
“Laugh-out-loud funny while being as illuminating as ever.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred)
“National Book Award-winning Ha Jin uses sly, black humor to underscore the high price of integrity, the consequences of betrayal, and the power of the written word.” —Library Journal (starred review)
“Takes aim at exploitative novels and international relations. . . . Ha Jin’s prose is always pleasurable to read.” —Publishers Weekly
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
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