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Chinese Walls & Daughters Of Hui book cover
Chinese Walls & Daughters Of Hui
Xu Xi
1996
First Published
3.50
Average Rating
268
Number of Pages
CHINESE WALLS (Novel 1994) It's the sixties. U.S. sailors on R&R prowl the streets of the waterfront in Hong Kong where the Indonesian-Chinese Hsu family lives. What's a prostitute? nine-year old Ai-Lin asks her older brother Philip who is horrified she knows the word. Eldest brother Paul tries to explain about the girls with the orange hair Ai-Lin has seen next door at Chung King Mansion. Written in the first person, the book, according to one reviewer, leaves no cheap or smutty aftertaste, and is like listening to a close friend talking about her life, her family, her love and her frustrations. This controversial first novel launched the author's career in Asia. DAUGHTERS OF HUI (Novella/Stories 1996) This collection of a novella and three stories was named one of the top ten best books of Asia of 1996 and won wide critical acclaim. Reviewers say the author addresses the prudery of Confucian values and remark the streak of mischief in the tapestry of her story line. Others note that though the subject matter can be raunchy, the sleaze element is conspicuously absent, and also that her work is arrestingly poignant.
Avg Rating
3.50
Number of Ratings
10
5 STARS
10%
4 STARS
40%
3 STARS
40%
2 STARS
10%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Xu Xi
Xu Xi
Author · 7 books

Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database. XU XI is the author’s pinyin* short form name which is also her byline, but she is most assuredly not the following beings with the same pinyin name: a Chinese painter & sculptor; the author of tomes about acupuncture; a nationalist or a dissident-in-exile of any nation-state; a reality TV show host in some special economic zone or on YouTube; an Academic in any Intellectual Discipline, real or imagined, as capitalized by Pooh or some other friendly wild thing. She has however had three legal English names (as well as several best left unnamed of dubious legal quality) and strives assiduously not to acquire any others. However, she really is the author of thirteen books, including five novels, six collections of short fiction & essays and most recently Insignificance: Hong Kong Stories, released June 15, 2018 by Signal 8 Press; the memoir Dear Hong Kong: An Elegy for a City (2017), as part of Penguin's Hong Kong series for the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to China. She is also editor of four anthologies of Hong Kong writing in English. Forthcoming from Nebraska Univeristy Press in March 2019 is an essay collection This Fish Is Fowl. A former Indonesian national, born and raised in Hong Kong, she eventually morphed into a U.S. citizen at the age of 33, having washed onto that distant shore across from Lady Liberty. These days, she splits time between New York and Asia (her sights set on the land of her former nationality, Indonesia) and still mourns the loss of her beloved writing retreat in Seacliff, on the South Island of New Zealand, where she hovered, joyously, for seven years. *pinyin = transliteration for Mandarin Chinese or Putonghua (P), the official language of China although Xu is far more fluent in Cantonese (C), that being the people’s language of her birth city, Hong Kong.

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