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Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather

By: Gao Xingjian
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: HarperPerennial
ISBN: 0007170394
ISBN-13: 9780007170395
Released: 21 Mar 2005
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


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Customer Reviews

Incomprehensible - By: G. W. Strang, 04 Jan 2009
These stories read like dream sequences with no logical structure. Two of the stories were completely incomprehensible whilst the others were, where I understood them, boring.
Wistful long prose poems - By: Depressaholic, 17 Jan 2006
Gao Xinjian’s book is a wistful collection of writing. It is not so much a collection of short stories as a series of long prose poems. Each essay has no narrative structure, with beginning, middle & end. Instead the author describes scenes from ordinary lives, mundane but perhaps important moments for the characters involved. There are a honeymooning couple visiting a deserted temple, a dayin the park, a swimmer with cramp, among other vignettes. In each case, the characters are glimpsed interacting with little apparent rhyme or reason as to why the story has chosen to access them at that particular moment of their day over any others. Their dialogue is often mundane & banal. The reader is consequently not being invited into a story, but rather simply to act as a voyeur into unremarkable momentsin other people’s lives.
Although Gao is a beautiful writer, I have to admit that I just couldn’t get stuckin to this collection. The style doesn’t lend itself to involved reading, & my attention wandered easily. Though I often enjoy stories with no real narrative, they usually have some obvious theme or purpose. I struggled to see onein much Gao’s book. Nevertheless, he is obviously a skilled writer, & I would like to read more of his work, but, beyond the wistfulness of the style, I couldn’t find anything here to hold my attention. They were good as stand-alone prose poems, but it wasn’t the Nobel prize-winning stuff I had hoped for.
Crisp short stories - By: Philippe Horak, 11 May 2004
Gao Xingjian uses small events occurringin daily life such as the visit of a decaying temple by a young couple, a road accident involving a father & a his young child, a swimmer suffering from a sudden pain or conversationin a park to deal with topics which he cherishes: the lost innocence of youth, the quest for an environment ruined by modern architecture or the nostalgia for a lost tenderness that only a father or grandfather could provide. Often there is no plotin those short stories, but a simple succession of images, impressions, dreams & thoughts. An author well worth discovering.

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