Strange Beasts of China
By Yan Ge
Translated by Jeremy Tiang
By Yan Ge
Translated by Jeremy Tiang
By Yan Ge
Translated by Jeremy Tiang
By Yan Ge
Translated by Jeremy Tiang
By Yan Ge
Translated by Jeremy Tiang
By Yan Ge
Translated by Jeremy Tiang
Category: Contemporary Fantasy | Literary Fiction
Category: Contemporary Fantasy | Literary Fiction
Category: Contemporary Fantasy | Literary Fiction
-
$17.99
Mar 15, 2022 | ISBN 9781612199702
-
$25.99
Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9781612199092
-
Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9781612199108
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
The City and Its Uncertain Walls
The Hollow and the Haunted
Lightning in Her Hands
An Instruction in Shadow
A Dark and Secret Magic
Candle & Crow
The Village Library Demon-Hunting Society
Rewitched
The Cottage Around the Corner
Praise
Luminous and beguiling… Yan is a deft and engaging storyteller, with a proclivity for dramatic revelations… Yan’s rare versatility and inventiveness keeps the narrative continuously surprising. … Strange Beasts transfixes you like a vivid dream, offering glimpses of the waking world contorted into uncanny forms.” — The Washington Post
“Magical realism of the best kind, where the spectacular is paired with just enough irony and daffy humor to keep it grounded on earth—or whichever world this fun and beguiling book takes place.” — Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
“Delightful. Through the narrator’s futile quest to catalog beasts, Yan captures the fluidness of city life, the way urban space defies definition even for people hellbent on making sense of it.” —The New York Times
“A page-turner whose dense, fantastical atmosphere lingers long after the read.” —Vulture
“Strange Beasts of China feels like a riddle and a parable and a dream, the kind of book you want to get lost in.” —The Philadelphia Inquirer
“Mixes a sort of Borgesian bestiary of mysterious creatures with a deep sense of urban andsocial alienation to produce an enthralling and fascinating narrative. A breath of fresh air in theoften hard-sf dominated field of recently translated Chinese science fiction, this novel is a must-read for fans of Vandermeer, Borges, or fantasy fiction that blurs the line between genre and literary fiction.” —Booklist (starred review)
“The overall effect of Yan’s storytelling is dreamy and hypnotic, sometimes opaque but always captivating. These cryptic but well-told tales offer much to chew on.” —Publisher’s Weekly
“Moving and magical, Strange Beasts of China is stunningly alive and unsettling in all the best ways. I am in awe of its bold imagination, endless depth, and philosophical weight. Every page of this book is magnetic.” —K-Ming Chang, author of Bestiary
“The delights of Strange Beasts of China, an inspired bestiary as investigative novel, are the authentic human emotions evoked. Fear, loneliness, melancholy, and hope fill every page. I can’t wait to read Yan Ge’s wonderful novel again.” —Paul Tremblay, author of A Head Full of Ghosts
“Strange Beasts of China is visceral and strange, its hypnotic storytelling punctuated by twists that feel like knifejabs: sudden, tearing, alive. Yan Ge has created haunting beasts that move through a warped yet familiar world, and Jeremy Tiang’s translation is wonderful. I felt this one in my bones.” —Isabel Yap, author of Never Have I Ever
“I loved the novel—charged with melancholy surrealism, its preoccupations with being and loneliness are both timeless and all too timely. The translation by Jeremy Tiang is especially brilliant and engaging.” —Sharlene Teo, author of Ponti
“I don’t know if it was the unexpected twists and turns in the protagonist’s storyline, or Tiang’s playful-yet-searing English, or the mirror this book holds up to our willingness to be divided and conquered, but I simply could not put this one down.” —Heather Cleary, translator of American Delirium
“A thought-provoking read on its own merit, the book takes on added significance given that it is an early work by Yan, whose talent is clear, raw and electrifying.” —Post Magazine
“Playful and darkly subtle . . . The world shown here is full of chaos and vulnerability . . . You could choose to despair at this, or take hope that Yan Ge cares enough to write tenderly about it.” —The Irish Times
“If Yan’s book was simply a selection of surreal vignettes centered around the beasts, a la Jorge Luis Borges or Italo Calvino, it would likely be compelling enough . . . The novel as a whole abounds with moments where vivid imagery coincides with an ever-present sense of danger.” —tor.com
“Strange Beasts of China is a fun, sometimes bleak, endlessly fascinating work of fiction, and one of the best Chinese novels in translation that you can pick up and read right now.” —Books and Bao
“More than the beasts and their mysteries, Strange Beasts of China stretches out the tender links between parent and child, lovers and friends, who cannot always remain. It expresses the joys and sorrows of being by yourself in a maddening metropolis, and of feeling estranged yet connected to your origins in previously unthinkable ways.” —Cha
“What appears to be a postmodern series of fantastic fables morphs into something more unexpected, expertly crafted by Yan Ge: an obscure mediation on the wildness of everyday existence, an evocative, bizarre consideration of the fragile boundaries between the self and the world beyond.” —The Skinny
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In