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One Man's Bible: A Novel
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One Man's Bible: A Novel
Unavailable
One Man's Bible: A Novel
Ebook464 pages11 hours

One Man's Bible: A Novel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

“Courageous … One Man’s Bible is driven by the sweeping panorama of history and the suffering and reconciliation that underlie it.”— Washington Post Book World

Published to impressive critical acclaim, One Man's Bible enhances the reputation of Nobel Prize-winning Gao Xingjian, whose first novel, Soul Mountain, was a national bestseller.

One Man’s Bible is a fictionalized account of Gao Xingjian’s life under the oppressive totalitarian regime of Mao Tse-tung during the period of the Cultural Revolution and its aftermath. Whether in the “beehive” offices in Beijing or in isolated rural towns, daily life everywhere is riddled with paranoia and fear, as revolutionaries, counter-revolutionaries, and government propaganda turn citizens against one another. It is a place where a single sentence spoken ten years earlier can make one an enemy of the state. Gao evokes the spiritual torture of political and intellectual repression in graphic detail, including the heartbreaking betrayals he suffers in his relationships with women and men alike.

One Man’s Bible is a profound meditation on the essence of writing, on exile, on the effects of political oppression on the human spirit, and how the human spirit can triumph.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateMar 17, 2009
ISBN9780061760303
Unavailable
One Man's Bible: A Novel
Author

Gao Xingjian

Gao Xingjian (whose name is pronounced gow shing-jen) is the first Chinese recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Born in 1940 in Jiangxi province in eastern China, he has lived in France since 1987. Gao Xingjian is an artistic innovator, in both the visual arts and literature. He is that rare multitalented artist who excels as novelist, playwright, essayist, director, and painter. In addition to Soul Mountain and One Man's Bible, a book of his plays, The Other Shore, and a volume of his paintings, Return to Painting, have been published in the United States.

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Reviews for One Man's Bible

Rating: 3.59285727 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    55. One Man's Bible by Gao Xingjianpublished: 1999format: 450 page Hardcoveracquired: 2003 from a 75% Off Books (do they still exist?)read: Dec 14-24rating: 4Another dusty book on the shelf, this one has been hanging around for some 14 years with my eye on it, but with my never having any clue what it contained. After reading a few pages, I looked up a few reviews and found some really critical, especially in comparison to [Soul Mountain] (which led to his Nobel prize). These negative reviews were a bit unfair but perfect for lowering my expectations and allowing me to really enjoy this.It's a lightly fictionalized memoir of Gao's experiences in the Chinese Cultural Revolution (roughly 1966 to Mao's death in 1976). He mixes in a life as a Chinese exile in the present (1996-1998) obviously based on him, but likely heavily fictionalized, or he was quite the promiscuous one. He is, I imagine, playful with the truth in many ways. His life in and memories of the Cultural Revolution are insane. It's not clear to me how political involved he was, but he experienced purges that flipflopped on themselves and purge the purgers. There was no right answer except to learn to mimic everyone around you with full emotional commitment. Anything that stood out brought suspicion, which brought a lot of suffering or worse. He says that it was almost easier to try to rebel than not to, since he craved independent thought and expression. Gao is an artist in different ways, visually, in play writing and as a novelist. The cover of the book is his own art work.There is a sophistication to how the book is presented. First in how he mixes the present and past so that they are distinct but become a whole. Part of this distinction is in how his younger self is always described in third person, but his (fictional?) current self is addressed directly always as "you". Second is in how he strives to create atmosphere. A lot of this stuff is beyond words, he has to create the experience in the text to really express it, and he does this really well. And third is the pacing. There is weak narrative drive as the each section, each chapter generally closes a story, with some notable exceptions. But it paces nicely and continuously so that it becomes a really nice to book to get lost it, and pick up anytime. It comes apart at the end where he ties off the past and then spends a lot of time about his fictional present and all his love affairs. He tells how content he is, but the impression is the opposite as it all comes out empty, and I'm not sure that wasn't his intention.All this together made for a really enjoyable reading experience and I think a fine book that leaves the reader with a lot to think about. A writer and artist's book. And it makes me really want to read [Soul Mountain]. "You know you are certainly not the embodiment of truth, and you write simply to indicate that a sort of life, worse than a quagmire, more real than an imaginary hell, more terrifying than Judgement Day, has, in fact, existed."
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I have to admit that I was unable to finish this book. I only made it a bit over halfway through.The book is well written; the story line and subject matter are both intriguing. The book deserves to be read.I think my mood at the time I attempted to read, and the pacing of the book threw me off the first time. I wholly plan pick this one back up one day and give it the time it deserves - and probably a better rating.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    A memoir of sorts about the author. his time in Mao's China as a child, a young man and an adult. At some point - little discussed - he leaves and lives in exile. The memoria then restarts in Hony Kong as it is being turned back over to China from the British. Then it alternates in between the present and sections where he muses about what is meant to be an artist, what is life, what is exile. I might have enjoyed it more, but for some reason I could not identify with him.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The Cultural Revolution was a 10-year long, horrific period in China's modern history. To Western readers of One man's bible by Gao Xingjian, a Chinese writer who has now settled in France, the almost incredible descriptions of the struggles during that period will impress them most. Details about, for instance, the Jinggangshan group at Tsinghua University are outragious and not usually known to the general readership, as they are largely omitted from films and history books. Historical landmark events mentioned throughout the book track the progress in time through this dark period.It is tempting to assume that the unnamed main character is the book, who is also a writer, stands for the author, but this is not logical. The novel is a work of fiction, and the main character would be several years younger than the author would have been at that time. The sense of distance is enhanced by the use of the second and third person singular throughout the narrative.Some readers have expressed discontent about the title of the novel, One man's bible. They suggest One Man's Testament would be more appropriate. However, by using the word "testament" would shift the focus to the events of the Cultural Revolution is the book, which is clearly not what the author has in mind. The Cultural Revolution should not be in the foreground of the story, but in the background: Chairman Mao's Cultural Revolution alone could not be blamed. He himself was also to blame, although this could not compensate her for her lost youth.. The context of this quote is his divorce from Qian -- the woman he took because she was available.The Cultural Revolution in the background, what is in the foreground, and partly the blame of the CR, is the writer's yearning for the freedom to write, and the freedom to fuck around. Rationing and restrictions did not only apply to rights, food, goods, but also to social relations, access to women in particular.The sexual freedom the main character experiences in the village, learning from the peasants, an unmoderated expression of vulgarities, incest and rape, is not exactly what he seeks, but it is "liberating." He marries Qian there, but is soon deserted by her, as his eyes and heart wander to other girls and women in the village.Lin, Xu Qian, Maomei, Xiaoxiao, Martina, Silvie, Linda, Margarethe; they do not all have names, sometimes it is merely a French filly.You are filled with gratitude to women, and it is not just lust. You seek them, but they do not necessarily want to give themselves to you. You are insatiable, but it's impossible for you to have them all. God did not give them to you, and you don't have to thank God, but, finally, you do feel a sort of universal gratitude. p.448andWhile he could not find a way out, by seizing these beautiful specks of feeling, he was able to avoid spiritual collapse. p.447The words 圣经 (shengjing) in the original Chinese title, 一个人的圣经, may refer to the Bible or the Confucian Classics. They are not a testament, but guides to avoid spiritual collapse.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is one of those books which seems disappointing in its early stages but which does pick up considerably after about the first quarter or third of the way through. The difficulties in getting into it were essentially two-fold:1. Gao is writing predominantly in flashback to the years of the Cultural Revolution and although it's obviously autobiographical the POV of the narrative shifts constantly between addressing his younger self (you do this, you did that) and writing about his younger self (he did this, he did that), which feels stilted and artificial throughout; and2. The early chapters are largely taken up with his sexual relationship with a self-pitying and self-indulgent German Jewish woman with a major chip on her shoulder (whether justifiably or not). In these early stages of the book, Gao swings alternately between beginning the recounting of his experiences and chapters focusing on their endless sessions of sex and her self-loathing and whining for reassurance and his endlessly having to provide the reassurance that she seems to need but never seems to benefit from. It is, in effect, from the moment that Margarethe leaves the novel that it really begins to take off.Inevitably it is Gao's depictions of the horrors and trauma of the years of Cultural Revolution with its cult of terror, arbitrary arrest, denouncements and punishments which hold the fascination.It therefore strikes me that it would perhaps have been closer to the spirit of the book if its English title had been One Man's Testament since what Gao has written here is indeed a testament, ie an act of witnessing the tumultuous moment in history known as The Cultural Revolution.Having read it, however, I'm now interested in finding out more about the Cultural Revolution and its predecessor, the Great Leap Forward (that wasn't) than I was before.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    One Man's Bible is a profound meditation on the excruciating effects of sordid political oppression on human spirit. The sobriety of writing bespeaks a dignity, which is an awareness of existence, and it is in this existence that the power of the frail individual lies. In a laudably detached voice, Gao Xinjian stipples a vivid picture of human frailty, repression and suffering under the totalitarian regime that exists only in memory, like a hidden spring of spring gushing forth a deluge of feelings that are difficult to articulate.The book, unlike many of the contemporaries that expose austerity of life under Red Horror, is shockingly realistic and yet not a tale of suffering, at least that is not what Gao intends it to be. The delineation is so genuine and faithful to the reckless truth and excruciatingly painful purging that only men in Gao's generation can identify with. The reality is almost too heartrending to bear, even in words: the acrimonious politics, the class struggles, and a society that is riddled with paranoia and fear under such taut repression and miasma.Gao reflected on his childhood and adolescence, cudgeled his memory of China's most obstreperous times, and yet found an incredulously detached voice as if he is an outsider to all the horror. His narrative in the book is almost a form of joy without any connotations of morality. He is indeed like an outsider who narrates transparently the events, who scrapes off the thick residue of resentment and anger deep in his heart and articulates his thoughts and impression with amazing equanimity, and audacity. The result is a brand new voice in modern Chinese literature, a genre that deviates from post-modernism. It is a pure form of narration in which he contrives to describe in simple language the terrible contamination of life by politics, the tragic infringement of human rights, and at the same time manages to expunge the pervasive politics that penetrates every pore and sense. One can realize that Gao has carefully excised the insights that he possesses at the instant and in the place, as well as shoving aside his present thoughts.The meaning of the title is at total loggerhead to any preoccupied speculation that readers might possess prior to reading the book. Gao contrives not to write about politics though he means to accent his memories during the dark period. The outcome is a stunning account of man person's fate is being miraculously and calumnously determined with surpassing accuracy than the prophecies of the bible, attributing to the policies and regulations that fluctuate so frequently, according to the bitter contention of Party members. As accurate as it claims to be, the dossier, which exists for each individual, is generally inaccessible to the general public, does not necessarily reflect the truth (including mentality, thoughts, political stance, and affiliations) of individuals. People learn to wear a mask, to extinguish their voices, to hide their true feelings deep at the bottom of their heart in the midst of paranoia. Everyone seizes the opportunity to put on an act to score some good points for himself. Nobody dares to look one another in the eyes for fear of betraying any allegedly reactionary or counter-revolutionary thoughts. The sense of time is warped as Margarethe, Gao Xinjian's Jewish lover, stirs up his memories of the embittered childhood under the shadow of Mao in a hotel room during pre-handover Hong Kong. Though a fictionalized account, Gao has engaged in a dialogue that produces a state of mind that allows him to endure the pain of articulating the painful events. To him the country doesn't exist but exists only in memory that the country is possessed by him alone, and is thus a one man's account. The book is an epistle of freedom that is obtainable only through seizing the moments in life and capturing instant-to-instant transformations.