At first Yan's insistence on graphic and gruesome descriptions and his interest in bodily functions make the novel rough going. Mo Yan turns these events over and over, introducing each a fragment at a time and exploring their significance as they pass from one character's experience into another's memory. A few key episodes serve as recurrent motifs: murders counterpoint battlefield massacres women are raped by their saviors and by enemy soldiers the community leader punishes gamblers and thieves with floggings, while the Japanese flog a saboteur as a preamble to skinning him alive. The narrator, a young man from the provinces, relates the intertwined histories of the Sino-Japanese war of the 1930s and of his parents and grandparents. In the way that Chinese landscape painting reshapes the viewer's perspective by offering not one but many focal points, this singularly forceful contemporary Chinese novel reinvents the notion of chronology.
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