Friday, September 19, 2008

Other Tales of the Flying Fox

Other Tales of the Flying Fox is a ''wuxia'' novel by Jinyong. Its title is also translated as Young Flying Fox in English. The first publication of the story appeared in 1960 in a magazine called ''Wuxia and History''.

The storyline of ''Other Tales of the Flying Fox'' precedes that of ''Flying Fox of Snowy Mountain'', although it was written one year ''after'' its literary predecessor.

Characters


Protagonists


* Hu Fei 胡斐
* Cheng Lingsu 程靈素
* Yuan Ziyi 袁紫衣
* Miao Renfeng 苗人鳳

Antagonists


*福康安
*田歸農
*鳳天南
*湯沛

Monkey (novel)

Monkey: A Folk-Tale of China , usually known as simply Monkey, is an abridged translation by Arthur Waley of the ''Journey to the West'' by Wu Cheng'en. Despite being , it was, for many years, by far the most accurate and complete translation of ''Journey to the West'' available in the English language. Because of this, it has been heavily cited by scholars of Chinese literature.

This was one title used for a popular, abridged translation by Arthur Waley; as well as being the title of the based on the story. The Waley translation has also been published as Adventures of the Monkey God; and Monkey: Folk Novel of China; and The Adventures of Monkey.

The Monkey God in question should not be confused with Hanuman, the Hindu god. The two appear to be unrelated.

Arthur Waley translated 30 out of the 100 chapters of ''Journey to the West''.

The structure of ''Journey to the West'' may be roughly divided into three parts:
#the introduction including the origin of , , , and ;
#the actual journey to the west, which has an episodic nature;
#and the ending .

Waley chose to translate the entirety of the introductory and ending chapters, as well as three episodes, each several chapters long, of the journey to the west.

Moment in Peking

Moment in Peking is a historical novel originally written in by the Chinese American author Lin Yutang. The novel covers the turbulent events in China from 1900 to 1938, including the Boxer Rebellion, the , the Warlord Era, the rise of nationalism and communism, and the origins of the .

The author tries not to be overly judgmental of the characters because he recognizes that too many issues were involved in the chaotic years of the early twentieth century China. There are no absolutely right or wrong characters. Each character held a piece of truth and reality and a piece of irrationality. In the preface, Lin writes that " is merely a story of... how certain habits of living and ways of thinking are formed and how, above all, adjust themselves to the circumstances in this earthly life where men strive but gods rule."

While the author does not display hatred toward the Japanese, he does let events and situations affecting the novel characters to let the reader clearly see the reason the Chinese are still bitter about Japan's military past. The novel ends with a cliffhanger, letting the readers hope that the major characters who fled from the coastal regions to the inland of China would survive the horrible war.

Lin wrote the book in English for a U.S. audience. He originally wanted the poet Yu Dafu to do the Chinese translation, but he had only completed the first section when he was killed by the Japanese in World War II. Lin didn't particularly like the first Chinese translation done in 1941.

In 1977 Zhang Zhenyu, a translator from Taiwan, created what is the most popular translation today. It was not available in mainland China until a publisher in Jilin issued a sanitized version in 1987. The current political climate permits Shaanxi Normal University Press to publish the full translation. Yu Dafu's son Yu Fei finished his own translation in 1991, but his version is not widely read.

Main Characters


Many characters in ''Moment in Peking'' are from three wealthy families: Yao, Tseng , and New . However, there are additional characters not from these families that play an integral part in the story, such as Lifu.

* Yao Mulan
The protagonist of the story, Mulan was from the wealthy Yao family. However, during the Boxer Rebellion, she was kidnapped by bandits and rescued by the Tseng family, who thereafter became close friends of the Yao's. Mulan was lively, intelligent, and generous, as well as extremely responsible. Her father always encouraged her interests. In addition, Mulan was extremely interested in "bone characters," or studying ancient Chinese characters written on bones, and singing Chinese opera. Her intelligence, along with her kindhearted nature, caught the interest of a young man named Kung Lifu. Though Mulan had the same sensation with Lifu, she married Sunya, and their marriage was mainly harmonious. They had three children together. The first daughter, Aman, died in the student protest.

* Tseng Sunya
Mulan's husband, Tseng Sunya, who was called "Fatty" by Mulan. As the youngest son of his family, Sunya was arguably the least responsible one, but had the "round character". He began to like Mulan when they were children. When Sunya noticed Mulan's interest in Lifu, he began to be cold with her. When they moved to Hangzhou in their middle age, Sunya fell in love with a young college art student Tsao Lihua, but Mulan won him back by her intelligence.

* Kung Lifu
A scholar and Yao Mochow's husband. He originally fell in love with Mulan, but he married Mochow.

* Yao Mochow
Yao Mulan's sister, also very clever, but to be different from Mulan, she was very calm and quiet.

* Yao Sze-an
He was a playboy when he was young. But he became a great Taoist later. He influenced Lifu very much.

* Mrs. Yao
A traditional Chinese woman. She loved her oldest son, Tijen, best. She opposed Tijen and Silverscreen's love, and caused their death. She was sad and very unhealthy in her later life.

* Cassia
She was the concubine or maid at the Tseng household. She had two daughters Ailien and Lilien, who became modern ladies and married doctors.

* Tseng Wenpo
He was a typical old Manchuria officer, incorrigible and fossil. He hated everything about foreign countries.

* Mrs. Tseng
The leader of the Tseng family. She held the family together, and she liked Mulan and Mannia, but hated Suyun.

* New Suyun
Her parents thought Jinya was a man who had the right characters to be a successful officer, so Suyun married Chinya. During their marriage, she bossed and ordered him around like a busboy. Suyun later became a friend of Inging who was her second brother's concubine. She divorced Chinya, and became an officer's concubine and also the infamous Japanese-controlled heroin dealer known as the "White Flour Queen". Years later, she finally recognized her mistake. She was killed by the Japanese.

* Sun Mannia
Married to the Tseng's eldest son, Pingya. She became a widow the day after her wedding, and was killed by the Japanese during the war.

* New Huaiyu
The second son of the New family. He left his wife and four children, and married a singsong girl named Inging . He became a betrayer of his country, and was nearly killed by his eldest son.

* Tseng Chinya
The second son of the Tseng family.

* Tseng Pingya
The eldest son of the Tseng family. He loved Mannia very much, however, he died the day after his wedding.

* Dimfragrance
She was kidnapped when she was a child, and met Mulan. When Mulan was saved by Mr. Tseng, Dimfragrance was sold to other family. She became a nursery maid of Mulan's child some years later. She finally found her family, and became Jinya's second wife.

* Tsao Lihua
A young art student. She met Sunya in Hangzhou, and fell in love with him. Sunya lied to her that his wife was an old and stupid country woman. When she met Mulan, she was surprised, and eventually became her friend. She finally married another man.

*Yao Tijen
Mulan's older brother. He was a typical foppish man. His father sent him to England to study, but he spent all of the money in Hongkong. He fell in love with his servant girl Silverscreen, and had a son with her. Their love was against by his mother. After Silverscreen's suicide, he died in an accident.

* Afei
Mulan's younger brother. He was taught well by his father.

* Tung Paofen (Dong Baofen, 董宝芬)
A Manchuria princess. Her family once owned the garden which became Yao's later. Her family believed that there were much treasure buried in the garden, and sent her to Yao family to work as a servant girl to find the treasure. She married Afei after Redjade's death.

* Redjade
Mulan, Mochow, and Afei's cousin. She was madly in love with Afei, and admired Lin Daiyu from the classic . When she misunderstood a conversation and thought that Afei didn't love her, she committed suicide by drowning herself.

Film, TV or theatrical adaptations


The novel has been adapted twice into a television drama, including the most recent version in 2005, starring Zhao Wei.

Marrying Buddha

Marrying Buddha is the second novel by author Wei Hui and is a sequel to her first published novel, Shanghai Baby.

Plot


Set four years on from the events of ''Shanghai Baby'', ''Marrying Buddha'' continues the story of Coco, a writer from Shanghai, now aged 29. The plot intersperses Coco's adventures in New York,and later in Madrid, Barcelona and Buenos Aires, with her journey in China from Shanghai to the Buddhist monastery on Mount Putuo, .

In New York, Coco meets a - documentary filmmaker named Muju, and after a short romance moves in with him. Muju is a divorcee with strict ideas about women's roles and behaviour. He prefers his girlfriends, for example, to be competent cooks and willing to demonstrate their expertise for him. Coco, who cannot cook, finds it difficult to adapt to life with Muju. After a few months, Coco meets another man, the all- Nick. When she travels to Spain without Muju, she resists embarking on an affair with Nick, who coincidentally visit the same cities and stays in the same luxury hotels as Coco. In Buenos Aires, Coco and Muju meet again, but Muju is disappointed with what he feels is Coco's snobbery and arrogant, self-centred behaviour. The two argue, and soon after returning to New York, Coco travels home to Shanghai without knowing whether she and Muju are still lovers.

In Shanghai, after resuming her old, pleasure-filled life, Coco travels to the place of her birth, Mount Putuo, where she spends time with an elder in a Buddhist monastery. Later, Nick pays a surprise visit to Coco in Shanghai, and Coco finally relents and sleeps with him. After he leaves, Muju pays a surprise visit to Coco in Shanghai, and Coco sleeps with him, too. Shortly afterwards, Coco learns she is pregnant, but she does not know who is the father, Muju or Nick.

Details


''Marrying Buddha'' is supposedly a continuation of the Wei Hui's semi-autobiographical story of Nikki/Coco, a young Shanghainese author of erotic literature. The novel is set in various locations, but mainly New York, Shanghai and Mount Putuo, site of Coco's birth and a Buddhist monastery. Although there is some mention of the events and people from Shanghai Baby - in ''Marrying Buddha'', Coco embarks on a tour of -speaking countries to promote that novel - some key characters and plot points, including the suicide of Coco's then boyfriend Tian Tian are not referred to at all. In addition, new facts that were not mentioned in Shanghai Baby emerge: including that shortly before the events of ''Shanghai Baby'', Coco attempted suicide by slashing her wrists and that she had a boyfriend with Mafia connections.

In New York, Coco is a student at Columbia University, an observer of American life and an avid consumer of American brands and culture. She visits Chinatown, shops at Barneys New York, Barnes and Noble, and Bloomingdales, and is perplexed by the American men she dates. Soon, she meets Muju, a half Japanese, half Italian filmmaker. At first, Coco is not impressed: Muju buys her a humidifier as a gift. However, Coco is soon won over by Muju's knowledge of tantric sex practices and Eastern wisdom. After a few months, Coco moves into his apartment. Things do not always run smoothly though: Muju expresses his deep respect for women who can cook delicious meals, just like his ex-wife, who one day turns up and does just that. When Coco tries to cook Chinese food in Muju's kitchen, disaster occurs - she burns the shrimp and a drop of fat jumps out of the frying pan and burns her cheek, temporarily marring her complexion. Muju and Coco fight, and when Coco throws a jar of designer face cream into the toilet, Muju is disappointed by her immaturity. Later, Coco and Muju try out new tricks in the bedroom, and Muju displays his knowledge of Eastern wisdom by refusing to ejaculate and sharing a variety of Japanese traditional sex aids. Coco suggests a threesome, and Muju is impressed when she is not jealous of the American prostitute whom they invite to their bed.

The two are happy, although the relationship is not perfect. It is shadowed by the fact that Muju has some faults that Coco cannot reconcile. For example, he refuses to ever accompany anyone to the airport, he refuses to ejaculate, and he is missing a joint on one of his fingers. Muju is similarly frustrated by Coco's lack of self-control, her inability to cook, and her desire for a baby despite her immaturity.

Whilst out one evening in New York with her visiting Chinese cousin Zhu Sha, Coco meets Nick, a middle-aged but very attractive New Yorker:

He looked very like George Clooney, but even more handsome, slim and stylish, dressed entirely in black Armani. He seemed about forty-five years old...When he spoke I was startled by his magnetic voice. Hearing him talk was like ice-cream to the ears


Initially, Coco refuses to embark on an affair with Nick, rejecting his advances despite her attraction to his magnetic, ice-cream voice. When Coco travels to Madrid to promote her now best-selling novel, she bumps into Nick in a restaurant. Coincidence following coincidence, Nick is also traveling on to Barcelona at the same time as Coco, and is staying in the same hotel. Coco is very attracted to Nick, but manages to reject all his advances. After Barcelona, she leaves for Buenos Aires with only his contact details.

In Buenos Aires, Coco meets up again with Muju. Things seem to be going well, until Muju criticises Coco for her behaviour towards the wait staff in the hotel:

Muju took a sip of tea. "Perhaps you weren't aware of it, but for a second there you demonstrated unnecessary arrogance".
I nearly spat the bread out of my mouth. "I've no idea what you're talking about." My voice trembled and my hands clenched themselves into fists.


Coco is extremely upset at Muju's criticism, and although the two are reconciled in New York, Coco decides to return to Shanghai to start work on her new novel. In Shanghai, she is surprised to learn that Nick is also in the city. Coco is delighted, and the two meet in the Shanghai Ritz-Carlton hotel, where Nick is staying. To impress Coco, Nick buys her a very expensive Ferragamo Christmas tree. Back in his hotel suite, Coco is overwhelmed by this purchase and lets Nick make love to her without contraception. The very next day, Nick flies back to New York.

Shortly afterwards Muju flies to Shanghai to see Coco. The two make love in her apartment, without using contraception. Muju ejaculates for the first time, surprising Coco.

After Muju leaves, Coco discovers that she is pregnant. She decides to keep her baby, although she is not certain which of her two lovers is the father.

The novel is interspersed with the story of Coco's visit to her birthplace on Putuo Island. There, she gains wisdom from her discussions with a Buddhist elder at the monastery in which she was born. It is this wisdom that allows her to cope with her pregnancy.

Themes, Stereotypes and Similarities with ''Shanghai Baby''


''Marrying Buddha'' shares similar themes with its predecessor, ''Shanghai Baby''. Both are written in the and contain frank descriptions of the sex life of the narrator, Coco, who is supposedly a thinly-disguised semi-autobiographical portrait of the author, Wei Hui. In ''Shanghai Baby'' Coco has two lovers: an Eastern lover and a Western lover . In ''Marrying Buddha'', Coco again has two lovers, one Eastern and one Western . Again, the Eastern lover is Coco's 'real' boyfriend, and she has an affair with a Western man. Again, Coco is interested in Western consumer culture, dropping brand names, getting excited at shopping trips to large, luxury department stores, and judging the merits of her lovers based on their ability and willingness to buy her brand-name goods.

In both novels, the events that happen to Coco do not promote in her any kind of real personal growth. Coco does not feel much other than superficial emotions, despite discovering her pregnancy with a child whose father could be one of two different men. Again, Wei Hui focuses her novel on the erotic life of her narrator, seeking to provide insights into the differences between men and women, and the relationships between the sexes. Women are passionate but uncontrolled; men are pleasure-seekers and like women to dress sexily and cook meals for them.

Some reference is made to politics and the world external to Coco's erotic life. Amongst the themes mentioned are: the current state of literature in China. Attending a lecture-cum-press conference at Columbia University with some older, male, Chinese writers, Coco expresses regret that her novel was banned in China and that the male writers get a state salary and pension whereas she does not. Coco is in New York for the events of 9/11 and makes some passing reference to them. In Spain, she sees some demonstrators and asks her companion what is going on:

"What are they doing?" I asked nervously.

"Protesting." Susan looked worried too.

"Why are they protesting?"

"Hard to say. Probably the problems in the Middle East."

"Yeah, must be," I said. In my heart, I knew that Susan and I would never understand those politics, those wars with their wild bursts of testosterone. Why was the situation in the Middle East always so violent?


Wei Hui is unsure of Coco's intellectual abilities. On the one hand, Coco is described as highly intelligent and creative. On the the other, she exists entirely in her own self-centred world of sex and brand-name clothing, seemingly unable to relate to the wider world around her, not even to political events in her native China which affect her directly. Although ''Marrying Buddha'' expands its horizons to encompass places other than Shanghai and China, Wei Hui does not really describe the new countries or places that Coco visits except superficially. The novel, like its narrator, seem condemned to live in a small world of cliches, pop-culture references, and brand name goods. With Nick at a auction in a five-star hotel in Shanghai, this is how Coco expresses her shock at the amount of money Nick is bidding on one of the auction lots:

"You're crazy," I said in a low voice. "You could buy seven pairs of Manolo Blahniks with that money."


As in ''Shanghai Baby'', Wei Hui, through her narrator, Coco, associates feminism and women's rights with the right to unlimited sex with multiple partners. Coco sees herself as a liberated woman, whose knowledge of her own body and sets her apart from the previous generation of Chinese women. Yet Coco's femininity seems constructed along the familiar lines of stereotypes about Asian women and Asian women's sexuality. Coco dresses in traditional Chinese silk clothing; she tries to please her boyfriend by cooking a complicated meal for him; she is partly jealous and partly in awe of her boyfriend's ex-wife who feels that a woman's place is in the kitchen; she feels that a woman's destiny is to have children and 'give birth to a man'. Her transgender friend Xi'er strives to be the perfect woman, and dresses like a stereotypical colonial Chinese concubine; like Coco, she seeks out Western lovers. Xi'er's Australian boyfriend says:

"It's the energy of our age. The desire for women's rights is really unusual. Ultimately, it'll destroy the world."


Just as in ''Shanghai Baby'', throughout ''Marrying Buddha'', there is a confusion about the role of women in contemporary China , and this confusion is bound up in a nostalgic longing for the colonial past. Coco expresses a deep nostalgia for certain aspects of China's past - which she construes as being beautiful and elegant without apparently realizing what women's role in that society really meant. This romanticized and contradictory nostalgia is paradoxically tied in with her self-image as a liberated woman. Coco dresses only in traditional Chinese qipao dresses, despite the discomfort this entails, commenting that:


This kind of traditional Chinese garment is a bit like bound feet: both are the intensely beautiful product of a process that is violent to the point of maltreatment.


Coco's nostalgia for the past also expresses itself through her admiration for and attraction to W., a Japanese kept woman and former Geisha, whose mastery of the traditional female arts of cooking and looking after men is prized and admired by W's boyfriend, the childish Richard, as well as Coco's own boyfriend, Muju. Coco's attitudes to sex are similarly paradoxical and confused. She appears to believe that having relationships with multiple men is simply part of a complex human nature, and a passionate love of life - yet her one-night stand with the self-obsessed Nick - who leaves her the day after finally having unprotected sex with her - leaves her possibly pregnant by him, with little opportunity for any financial or emotional support.

Western reactions to ''Marrying Buddha''


The English translator of ''Marrying Buddha'', Larissa Heinrich, a lecturer in Chinese Studies and 'Transnational Chinese Media' in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences of the University of New South Wales, Australia, said of her translation project that:


"It was an exciting opportunity to translate Marrying Buddha," says Heinrich. "The book is an important cultural artefact, it's at the front line of a new genre of semi-autobiographical popular writing being produced by young Chinese women authors."


Wei Hui's second novel received contrasting reviews. Some reviewers praised the book for its daring, erotic and modern content, considering it to be groundbreaking because it explored subjects taboo in China. Marie Claire magazine praised Wei Hui for being an 'intelligent and passionate spokeswoman for the women of modern China'.

Other reviewers criticized the novel's lack of coherence, its shallow content, the lack of growth of its narrator, and its cliches. In the Adelaide Review, Gillian Dooley criticized the book for its 'cringefully tacky' moments, and wrote that:


It’s a little difficult to know how to approach this book. Presumably it has been translated into English from the original Chinese, though no translator is acknowledged, and this might account for some passages which read strangely. However, there’s no disguising the vapidity and self-indulgence of Marrying Buddha.

Lust, Caution

Lust, Caution is a novella by the Chinese writer Eileen Chang, that was first published in 1979. It is set in Shanghai during World War II. Reportedly, the short story "took Chang more than two decades to complete." It was adapted into in 2007 by director Ang Lee.


Original Story


Lust, Caution was based on Chang's English short story, The Spyring, which was finished in the 1950s but remained unpublished until March 2008 when it appeared in .

Characters


* Wang, Jiazhi alias Mrs. Mak
* Mr. Yee
* Mrs. Yee
* Mr. Mak
* Kuang Yu Min
* Old Wu
* Lai Shu Jin

Plot summary


In China, during the Japanese occupation in WW II, young woman Mak is a member of a resistance group who plot to kill a Japanese collaborator, Yee. Mak starts a love affair with Yee for this purpose. However, she really falls in love with him, and just before her comrades try to kill him she warns him. He escapes and has the whole group executed, including Mak.

English translations


Lust, Caution was not published in English until 2007.

# Lust, Caution Translated by Julia Lovell. New York: Anchor Books, 2007. ISBN 978-0-307-38744-8
# Lust, Caution: The Story, The Screenplay, and the Making of the Film. Translated by Julia Lovell. New York: Pantheon Books, 2007. ISBN 978-0-375-42524-0

The original story in English, ''The Spyring'', was published by in March 2008.

Katherine (Anchee Min)

Katherine is the first novel by Anchee Min. It was published by Riverside Books in 1995.

Plot summary



Six years after the death of , the People's Republic of China opens its doors to learn how to integrate into the larger world. The title character, a thirty-six year old teacher in , learns a great deal of Chinese culture from interacting with her students in and out of class.

The narrator of the novel, twenty-nine year old Zebra Wong, is one of the students who eventually helps her adopt a Chinese girl, Little Rabbit. However, the principal of the school Katherine teaches at, Mr. Han, becomes suspicious of Katherine's after-class activities and, with the help of Katherine's student and spurned lover Lion Head, seizes upon her "corrupting influence" to call for her dismissal. Katherine appeals to the consul in Shanghai, but she is returned to America. She maintains contact with Zebra and tries to make arrangements for her and Little Rabbit to come to the United States as well, but only Zebra's paperwork is processed by the end of the novel.

Journeys to the Under-World

The Travel Notes in Hell , so called Journeys to The Under-World, is a Chinese novel, describing what Yangsheng who was a planchette handler saw and heard when he follow his master Daoji to visit Hell on instructions of the Jade Emperor. The Jade was issued on the 15th day in 8th moon with the express intention of helping and saving human beings.

The details and conversations of each Journey were written in Chinese characters on the planchette board during each planchette session held in Sheng Xian Tang-the words were read aloud and recorded on paper for compilation— a very tedious and time-consuming process. The visits were generally made at night time.

The purpose of this Book is to enable people to understand what happens to one's soul after death, to let readers realise that it pays to do more good deeds, when still alive. Through the story, the writer wants to bring out a about not doing evil.

Ghost Blows Out the Light

Ghost Blows Out the Light , also referred to as Candle in the Tomb, is a fantasy novel written by Zhang Muye about two grave robbers seeking hidden treasure, and first published online in March 2006. It quickly became the bestselling online novel in China with an estimated readership of six million, and when published in print form in October the same year, went on to sell over 500,000 copies,

Set in the 1980s, the novel follows former soldier Hu Bayi and his partner as they raid tombs in search of valuables.

Fortress Besieged

Fortress Besieged was written by Qian Zhongshu, published in 1947, and is widely considered as one of the masterpieces of twentieth century Chinese literature. The novel is a humorous tale about middle-class Chinese society in the 1940s. It is also one of the most well-known contemporary Chinese novels in China, and was made into a popular television series in the early 1990s.

Origin and History


The book was begun while Qian Zhongshu and wife Yang Jiang were living in Shanghai during the . According to Yang Jiang, the successful production of several of her plays inspired to write a full length novel.

The novel was begun in 1944, and completed in 1946. Much of the characters and plot are taken from the experiences of and abroad and in China. For example, the opening scene at sea reflects their journey from France to China onboard the ship Athos II.

The title is based on a proverb:

:''Marriage is like a fortress besieged: those who are outside want to get in, and those who are inside want to get out. ''

The novel is known for its acerbic asides, such as describing one young lady in the following way:

:''At first, they called her "truth" because "the truth is naked". But then, she's not actually completely naked. So they amended it to "partial-truth".''

The novel was published in Shanghai in 1947. The second edition was published 1948. The third edition in 1949. After the , the book was not printed again in mainland China until 1980. In the mean time, it was also banned in Taiwan because of its satire of the .

The novel has been translated into many languages. These include the Russian version which appeared in 1979, the American English version in 1979; and the German version in 1982.

Plot Summary






Set in the 1930s it follows the misadventures of Fang Hung-chien , a bumbling everyman who wastes his time studying abroad, and secures a fake degree when learning he has run out of money and must return home to China. The first part of the novel is set on the boat home, where Fang courts two young ladies.

Fang was the son of a country gentleman. A marriage had been arranged for him while at university, but the intended wife died before he could see her. After completing a degree in Chinese literature, he went to Europe where he studied at several universities without pursuing a degree. After being pressured by his family, he bought a fake degree from an American Irishman.

The year was 1937, and Fang was returning to China from Europe along with other graduating Chinese students. One fellow traveller was Miss Su, in her late 20s. She is quite pretty in a thin and pallid style, but her choosy attitude towards men means she is still unattached and getting slightly desperate. Another young lady on board was Miss Bao, who tended towards the tanned and voluptuous. Fang pursued Miss Bao with some success during the voyage. However, when the boat reached Hong Kong, Miss Bao disembarked into the embrace of her fiancee, a middle-aged, balding doctor, and Fang realised he had been used.

Fang then became more intimate with Miss Su. However, after they disembarked at Shanghai, Fang became occupied with finding a job, and attending matchmaking sessions arranged by his parents and former in-laws. After one failed attempt, Fang decided to contact Miss Su. While visiting her he also met her cousin, Miss Tang, and Miss Su's suitor, Zhao Xinmei.

The second section follows his securing a teaching post at a new university - where his fake credentials are used to keep him in line, and in the third part, it centers on his disastrous marriage. The novel ends with his wife leaving him, while he listens to a clock chiming.

Influences


Since its re-publication in 1980 in mainland China, ''Fortress Besieged'' has become nationally famous. Part of its popularity grew from its popular television series adaptation of 1990 and later radio series adaptation.

Aspects of the novel have entered the Chinese lexicon. For example, "Carleton University", from which the novel's character obtained his PhD paper, is used as an idiom meaning an illegitimate degree qualification or academic institution. Likewise, the novel's title, deriving from the French proverb, has given rise to a similar proverb in .

Empress Orchid

Empress Orchid is a novel by Anchee Min which was first published in Great Britain in 2004. It is written in and is a sympathetic account of the life of Empress Dowager Cixi - from her humble beginnings to her rise as the Empress Dowager.

Names within the story are different in spelling but retain the same pronunciation - allowing the reader to identify each relevant character to his or her real life counterpart.

Empress Orchid was also a 2006 nominee for the Richard and Judy Best Read of the Year Award.

Plot summary


The novel follows the life of a young Manchu girl named Orchid Yehonala. The story begins with the death of her father who was once a governor of Wuhu. His death left Orchid, her two siblings and her mother in poverty. His family travel to his birthplace Peking with his coffin for burial. Once in Peking, they move in with a distant uncle and his retarded son Ping .

Orchid gets a chance to better her life when issues a decree stating that he is looking for "future mates". Orchid is eligible because she is Manchu and that her father was the rank of "Blue Bannerman". She is chosen as the Imperial of the fourth rank. Her official title is Lady of the Greatest Virtue. There are a total of 7 Imperial consorts, and over 3000 concubines within the Forbidden City. is pronounced Empress, ranking her first out of the 7 Imperial consorts.

Once in the Forbidden City, Orchid befriends a eunuch called An-te-hai, who is assigned as her servant along with numerous other eunuchs and maids. A friendship begins to form between the two, and she appoints him as her first attendant.

As the months pass, Orchid becomes more desperate. The official duty of an Imperial consort is to sleep with the Emperor and produce male heirs, but Orchid has yet to be summoned. Without completing that duty, an Imperial consort risks being unaknowledged for the remainder of her life. Knowing this, Orchid decides to bribe Chief Eunuch Shim in order to gain Emperor Hsien Feng's attention. Her tactic works and she soon becomes the Emperor's favourite consort. During her time as the favourite, Orchid learns more about the current history of China, and the inner workings of the Forbidden City.

Later on within the story, Orchid becomes pregnant. She gives birth to the Emperor's first male heir amidst nationwide celebration. However, after the birth of his son Emperor Hsien Feng begins to lose interest in Orchid. Part of this is due to Nuharoo's plot to disrupt Orchid's life.

The emperor becomes ill as political situations in China worsen. Foreign powers are beginning to invade China, demanding that the emperor grants them the right to establish trade and port. The weak emperor is unable to defend his empire from the combined strength of the intruding forces and the royal family flees the capital when the enemies approach Peking.

Emperor Hsien Feng dies whilst in exile. Nonetheless, Orchid's life is still in danger from Su Shun as the Emperor has not yet named an heir. Later on in the novel Orchid persuades Hsien Feng to name Tung Chih as the new Emperor, with herself and Nuharoo as co-regents. is named as the head of the Board of Regents. As Su Shun had previously expected to gain more power from the death of Hsien Feng without Orchid's interference, tensions between the two increase.

Orchid is now granted the title Empress of Holy Kindness Tzu Hsi. Nuharoo becomes the Empress of Great Benevolence Tzu An. Orchid knows that her new position does not guarantee her safety as she is still restricted by the actions of Su Shun. With the assistance of An-te-hai and Orchid manages to successfully arrest and punish Su Shun and his associates, on the grounds that they had tried to organise a coup d'état.

The novel ends with the official burial of Emperor Hsien Feng and the hint of a new relationship between Orchid and General Yung Lu.

Death of a Red Heroine

Death of a Red Heroine is a mystery novel written by Qiu Xiaolong and published in English in the year 2000.

Plot summary



One afternoon, the naked body of a young woman is found wrapped in a black trash bag in an obscure canal in Shanghai by two friends. Upon further investigation, it is found that the corpse is that of Guan Hongying , a national model worker - thus bringing the case's political aspects squarely into place. Chief Inspector Chen Cao and his older subordinate Yu investigate the case, eventually tracing the likely murderer as Wu Xiaoming, the only son of Wu Bing, a high-ranking Party cadre.

Having then established Wu as the likely murderer, Chen and Yu must struggle to discover the motive, all the while grappling with political obstructions and power plays as Wu makes use of his family connections to hinder the investigation. Eventually, though, Chen discovers the motive and brings everything to the attention of his superiors.

Literary significance and reception


Written in English by a Chinese emigré and resident St. Louis, Missouri the author Qiu Xiaolong has had a largely favourable reaction to his first novel. It also seeks to do something more than tell a crime story.

:''"More than to create a suspenseful whodunit, Qiu wrote Red Heroine to explore the old-socialist/new-capitalist tensions that currently are central to his rapidly evolving homeland."''

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (novel)

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon is the fourth in a sequence of five novels that are collectively called the Crane - Iron Pentalogy, written by Wang Dulu from 1938 to 1942.

Adaptations



Ang Lee's film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon is loosely based on this book.

''New Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon'' was a film edited together from a Taiwanese television series.

The novel has been turned into a manhua series by Andy Seto, translated into English and distributed by ComicsOne.

Chinese Cinderella

Chinese Cinderella is a novel written by author Adeline Yen Mah which describes her experiences growing up in China during the Second World War. It was published in 1999 and is a revised version of part of her autobiography, .



Critical Reception


''Chinese Cinderella'' has been reviewed by ''Publishers Weekly'' thus: "...The author recreates moments of cruelty and victory so convincingly that readers will feel almost as if they're in the room with her. She never veers from a child's sensibility; the child in these pages rarely judges the actions of those around her, she's simply bent on surviving. Mah easily weaves details of her family's life alongside the traditions of China and the changes throughout the war years and subsequent . This memoir is hard to put down..."

Radio adaptation


In 2006 the book was adapted for . It was produced in ten episodes. The adaptation was done by and broadcast on the The Big Toe Radio Show.

Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee

Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee is an 18th century detective novel. It is loosely based on the adventures of Judge Dee , a magistrate and statesman of the court, who lived roughly 630–700.

The ''Dee Goong An'' was translated by Robert van Gulik into English and used as the basis for his own series of detective novels about Judge Dee after he came across it in a secondhand bookshop in Tokyo. The author wrote that


In the preface, van Gulik describes some of the problems with traditional Chinese murder mysteries. First, the criminal is introduced at the very start of the story and his crime and reasons are carefully explained, so removing any mystery from the story at the start. Second, the stories always have a supernatural element with ghosts telling people about their death and even accusing the criminal. Third, the stories were filled with digressions into philosophy, the complete text of official documents, and much more, making for very long books. Fourth, Chinese novels tended to have a huge cast of characters and these characters are all described by their relation to the various main actors in the story. Lastly, the Chinese writers spent little time on the details of how the crime was committed and great deal of time on describing the torture of the criminals, even going on into their further torments in one of the various ''hells'' for the damned.

Van Gulik then goes on to say
This is exactly what Robert van Gulik did over the next 20 years, as he created his Judge Dee series. For the books based on the semi-fictional detective Judge Dee see: Judge Dee.

The original Chinese novel contains cultural elements from the Ming Dynasty rather than Tang Dynasty China, which may have been done deliberately or from ignorance about Tang-era China.

The book features nine drawings, three copies from old Chinese art, and six illustrations by the author.

Plot introduction


There are three cases in this book. The first might be called "The Double Murder at Dawn". The case describes the hazardous life of the traveling silk merchant and the murder which is committed to gain wealth.

The second is ''The Strange Corpse'' which takes place in a small village, a crime of passion which proves hard to solve. The criminal is a very determined woman.

The third case ''The Poisoned Bride'' contains the murder of the daughter of a local scholar who marries the son of the former administrator of the district. This case contains a surprising twist in its solution.

All three cases are solved by Judge Dee, the district magistrate - Detective, prosecutor, judge, and jury all wrapped up into one person.

Literary significance and criticism


"''Dee Goong An'' is the genuine article, dating from the 18th century and barely modified by the translator to make it intelligible today. Like his modern fictions, it adroitly intertwines three plots and shows the judge and his aides in their now familiar guise. The introduction and notes are as entertaining as the tale, once the reader has become a Dee-votee."

Blade-dance of the Two Lovers

Blade-dance of the Two Lovers is a wuxia novella written by Jinyong. It was first published in 1961 in ''Ming Pao''.

Summary



The story was set during the Qing Dynasty. A pair of famous blades were being transported by an escort agency commissioned by provincial officials to be delivered to the Imperial Palace. The blades were reputed to contain the secret to invincibility, and thus became a fiercely sought artefact amongst the pugilists. To ensure the chief of the armed escorts did not try to claim the blades himself, the provincial officials even detained his family members at the local barracks on the pretext of protecting them and taking care of them.

Amidst attempts by various parties to seize the weapons, through serendipidity, the blades ended up in the hands of a youthful scholar Yuan Guan-Nan, and a young girl Xiao Zhong-Hui who was out on her first adventure.

The pair who met each other for the first time fell in love, and the young scholar promised to visit her at her residence during her father's forthcoming birthday celebration. He turned up and was well received by the father, Xiao Ban-He, and his two wives, Madam Yuan and Madam Yang .

At the party, they were taught by a husband-wife guest couple a special form of blademanship for mutually enamoured partners to become an unbeatable team, covering each other's weakness while multiplying their combined combat lethality.

The husband, Lin Yü-Long, and his wife, Ren Fei-Yan, had been taught this skill years ago by a monk who hoped it would make them more loving, as the couple were always bickering. As they were unable to cease their squabbling, they never managed to achieve mastery over the skill. Both were adamant that it was only normal for couples to fight, and scoffed when Xiao Zhong-Hui told them her father and two mothers never had arguments.

Arrival of Imperial Guards interrupted the revelry, having tracked one of the blades to the girl, and to her residence. Another body of government troops also appeared, though for a different purpose. They denounced Xiao Ban-He as being one of the most wanted renegades by the Imperial Court.

Fighting their way out, the young couple's combined prowess were seriously compromised when it was revealed that the Yuan Guan-Nan was the long-lost-son of Madam Yuan, making him half-brother to Xiao Zhong-Hui.

''It turned out that many years before, Xiao Ban-He was a resistance fighter against the Qing regime. He infiltrated the Imperial Palace by offering himself castration and served as a eunuch. While waiting for an opportunity to inflict the greatest damage to the Qing, he learned of two other resistance fighters, named Yuan and Yang respectively, imprisoned in the Palace jail along with their wives, Yuan's son, and Yang's daughter. Shortly after, the two men were executed.

''Xiao Ban-He decided to rescue the widows and the children instead, despite knowing that it would blow his cover and original mission. While fleeing, they were separated from the young boy.

''After they escaped successfully, Xiao Ban-He disguised himself with a new identity, passing off the widows as his wives, and raising the infant girl as his own. He cultivated himself as a chivalrous and philanthropic gentry, hoping it would help him locate the missing boy.

Thus, Yuan Guan-Nan and Xiao Zhong-Hui turned out not to be blood relations after all. Lin Yü-Long and Ren Fei-Yan had the last laugh when they triumphantly recalled their disbelief in married people who never bicker with each other.

Becoming Madame Mao

Becoming Madame Mao is a historical novel by Anchee Min detailing the life of Jiang Qing. She became Madame Mao after her marriage to Mao Zedong. In this story Min tries to cast a sympathetic light on one of the most controversial political figures in the .

Plot summary


Madame Mao was born to a very poor family around 1910 . She had an abusive father who kicked her and her concubine mother out of the house at an early age. Her mother ended up as a prostitute and servant and the young 'Madame Mao' ran away to grandparent's. Anchee Min, the author, seems to attribute a lot of Madame Mao's later actions to her childhood - and that a lot of her incessant claims to power actually came from a need to be desired and to feel close to Mao rather than a deep need for power herself. Madame Mao's dream was to become an actress but she has only achieved mediocre success. She spent a few years in Shandong province and then Shanghai. In Shanghai she had some success in playing Nora from Doll's House - and the author clearly parallels Nora's strength and inability to be controlled with Lan Ping's strong personality and need to be in control and the center of attention. The play is closed down since it is perceived to be too subversive by the authorities. She even ends up in prison for a short time but is released after signing a document denouncing Communism. After what seems like strings of rejections as well as a few serious lovers and two husbands, she travels to Yenan which is Mao's revolutionary base to become part of his movement. The book does not offer much explanation for the switch from actress to countryside revolutionary except that she certainly was involved in revolutionary elements and that with the absence of work as an actress she did not have many options and joining the Communist revolution seemed to be a common choice for young discontened students and others in their 20s.

In Yenan, she soon meets Mao as the leading actress in revolutionary plays. They meet frequently and finally become lovers. He is already married to his second wife but his second wife is in Russia and mentally unstable - by the time she returns to China the two have married and she is put in a mental hospital. The Communist Party is very much against Mao's affair with Lin Ping, in large part because they have worked hard to build up the image of his second wife as a martyr for the cause and do not want Mao's image to be tarnished in any way as an adulterer. The Party is supposed to emphasize discipline and unity. The affair continues despite these odds and the disapproval of many Communists. Finally, Lin becomes pregnant and Mao is allowed to divorce his current wife and marry her under the condition that she stay out of the public eye and is not involved in politics at all. Her name is changed to Jiang Ching and she will go down in history as Comrade Jiang Ching.

During the years before Communists gain full control of China, the relationship seems to go well, although the passion is reduced. Jiang follows Mao everywhere, even to the field, and becomes his secretary when he is sick.

However, things change once the Communists triumph and Mao becomes absolute dictator of China. They move to the Forbidden City in Beijing and live in separate quarters. Mao begins to lead a totally separate life with lots of traveling and entertaining. As she is not allowed by the party to be in the public eye she is not a part of all of this. She becomes very lonely and depressed. Mao has many affairs, especially bringing young virgins in from the countryside for his pleasure. Things last in this way for 17 years with the majority of Chinese people not even able to name the wife of the great Chairman.

However, Jiang Ching has never lost her ambition to be powerful and loved and noticed. She sees a glimmer of opportunity at Mao's low point - 2 years after the launch of the Great Leap Forward which proved so disastrous. She begins slowly to reemerge from the shadows and spends some time in Shanghai building up a network of actors and producers . Finally, she approaches Mao to reveal that a current popular play is actually submersive against the emperor. She feeds on his paranoia that those closest to him are actually plotting against him. He gives her some permission to carry on her activities and develop some propagandist plays that exalt him. Slowly she builds up her own friends and aides who can be trusted. Finally, in 1966 she is actually allowed to make an important speech and helps Mao develop the concepts behind the Cultural Revolution. Eventually, Mao puts her in charge of the 'ideology side of the business' and she wields an enormous amount of power.

Madame Mao, as she is now called, organizes festivals for revolutionary plays and begins to work closely with the student movements which have always been so important in China. She organizes and speaks to rallies of thousands of people to help launch the Cultural Revolution. Finally, Mao and Jiang decide to launch a student-led army called the Red Guards that she would be in charge of. These Red Guards ended up having more power than the official military for a number of years and wreaked chaos and havoc throughout the country. Her relationship with Mao is no longer romantic in the least but is mutually beneficial: 'For him, it is the security of his empire that she aids and for her, the role of a heroine. In retrospect she not only has broken the Party's restriction, she runs the nation's psyche. She is gripped by the vision that she might eventually carry on Mao's business and rule China after his death.'

As Madame Mao's power grows, so does her worry about Mao and his constantly changing allegiances and worries about betrayals. He emphasizes that the public only trusts her because he is backing her. His dementia and paranoia grows as he ages. At one point Mao invites a bunch of the 'old boy's over for a meeting without inviting her. She says: ' I should have known that my husband was doing the two-faced trick. I should have understood that although Mao had been promoting me, my new power unnerves him and he needs to have another force to balance the game.'

In Mao's final months, Madame Mao is desperate for him to name her as his successor or at the very least to give a definitive statement that she represents him. She desperately wants his power after his death but if that's not possible at the very least she needs protection from all the party members who are ready to attack her. She sends investigators to extract forced confessions from her enemies and becomes increasingly paranoid and power-obsessed herself. She forms a power circle called the 'Gang of Four' with herself as the leader, Chun-quiao , Wang Hong-wen and another disciple, Yiao.

In September 1976, Mao died at the age of 83. When Mao's will was eventually found, he named Hua Guofeng as his successor, a provincial governor from his home province. Madame Mao quickly sensed that her enemies would triumph - at Mao's funeral she was barely acknowledged. Soon even her Gang of Four desert her until, a few weeks after Mao's death, she is arrested.

Madame Mao remained in prison from 1976 to 1991 when she committed suicide. She was on Death Row the whole time, although she was not executed since her captors would have preferred to extract a confession of repentance from her.

Bao Gong An

Bao Gong An is an ancient Chinese novel written by Ming Dynasty's An Yushi .

Plot summary


The Judge Bao Zheng unveiled the evil doings by reasoning, with the help of his assistant. He has dark brown skin and a moon-shaped scar on his forehead. He has four bodyguards and one personal expert.

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Dai Sijie, and published in 2000 in French and in English in 2001. Its original French title is ''Balzac et la petite tailleuse chinoise''.

Plot Summary



During the height of the in 1971 , the sons of two allegedly reactionary doctors are sent to a remote village on the fictional mountain Phoenix of the Sky to be 're-educated' by hard work and peasant living. There, the two characters meet the local tailor's daughter and discover a collection of various translated Western novels hidden by another city boy sent to the country for re-education, Four-Eyes. As they flirt with the seamstress and secretly devour these banned works, they find transit from their grim surroundings to worlds they never imagined.

Characters



*Luo - Luo is the only character in the novel with a recognizable name. Luo is the son of a famous dentist who bragged of having worked on Chairman Mao's teeth, and is accused of being a reactionary for having committed the sin of suggesting that the Chairman was not perfect. Luo is audacious, a talented liar and storyteller. He doesn't evolve throughout the story like other characters do, but he seems to have only gained the knowledge of sexual relationship.

*The narrator - His name is Ma, but since it is only given in Chinese in the book, he is just known as "the narrator." The son of two doctors who have been labeled enemies of the people, the narrator mentions his name is written in Chinese characters that in English translate as "Horse Sword Bell." The narrator plays the violin, and is once referred to in the novel as "the fiddler." His character begins with very low confidence. However, as the novel progresses, the narrator's storytelling skills rival and then arguably surpass those of his friend Luo, through reading literature. He also becomes more audacious as he purposefully causes the headman of the village severe pain by pumping the machine that drills holes in teeth very slowly.

*The Little Chinese Seamstress - Daughter of a famous local tailor, the Little Seamstress is a rare beauty. By the end of Part 1, the Little Seamstress begins to have a sexual relationship with Luo. Though she has had no formal education, she was taught to read by her father. Amongst the ignorant peasants she has an air of sophistication, though Luo comments early in the novel that she is "not civilized, at least not enough for me!" However, Luo is only stereotyping her. As the novel progresses, the Little Seamstress learns about the outside world by reading the foreign books with the help of Luo. Finally at the end, she surpasses Narrator and Luo.

*The Headman - The headman is the leader of the village the narrator and Luo are sent to for re-education. He has a very arrogant personality. One day, he even blackmailed Luo to fix his teeth in return for not sending the narrator to jail.

*Four-eyes - He is the son of a writer and poetess, however doesn't seem to have inherited his parents' ability of writing. Four-eyes must wear thick glasses to compensate for his nearsightedness . He possesses a treasure trove of forbidden "reactionary" Western novels which the Narrator and Luo covet and eventually steal. He is referred to as a character who is used to humiliation. He is the kind person who is dependent on people such as his mother. He also doesn't seem to know how to fit in.

*The Miller - He is a filthy old man who lives alone and is a repository of local "folk" songs. The Miller narrates one part of the novel and provides songs to the boys, who then relate them to Four-eyes. He is one of the characters who chooses not to get involved with the revolutionary.

*The Tailor - He is the father of the little Chinese Seamstress. He is richer than all the peasants, and nearly treated as royalty. At one point in the story, the narrator recalls a Western story to him while he spends the night with the narrator and Luo. Through this experience, he gains a slight air of sophistication, and the story begins to influence the clothes that he makes.

Film, TV or theatrical adaptations


* A was released in 2002, directed by Dai himself.
*Sites related to Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress
**http://www.readinggroupguides.com/guides3/balzac_and_the_seamstress1.asp
**http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/china/daisijie.htm#summaries

And the Rain My Drink

And the Rain My Drink is a novel by Han Suyin. It is set against a backdrop of the Malayan Emergency of the late 1940s and 1950s. It describes the methods used by the British colonial authorities and the left-wing rebels, and how individual lives were affected.

A Many-Splendoured Thing

A Many-Splendoured Thing is a novel by Han Suyin. It was made into the 1955 film '''', which also inspired .

It tells the story of a married but separated British reporter, who falls in love with a Eurasian doctor originally from Mainland China, only to encounter prejudice from her family and from Hong Kong society.

A Dictionary of Maqiao

A Dictionary of Maqiao is a novel written by Chinese writer Han Shaogong. It was first published in 1996 and has been translated into English by Julia Lovell. Yazhou Zhoukan selected it as one of the top 100 greatest Chinese novels in the 20th century.

Maqiao is a village in Hunan province, . This novel is written in the form of a dictionary, or more accurately, encyclopedia. It collects 115 ‘articles’ on Maqiao village life from the perspective of a young student sent there by the Down to the Countryside Movement. These ‘articles’ do cohere into a story.

After this book was published, someones criticised that it violates the copyright of 's book, ''Dictionary of the Khazars''. The author, Han Shaogong, brought a defamation case against the critics and won this case.

A Deadly Secret

A Deadly Secret is a wuxia novel by Jinyong, alternately translated as ''Requiem of Ling Sing''. It was first published in the Southeast Asia Weekly in 1963. The story revolves around Di Yun , a down-to-earth young martial artist who was imprisoned after being framed for a crime. In his quest for revenge, he accidentally acquired the ''Lian Cheng Jianfa'' , an ancient artifact not only prized for its martial arts values, but also for containing a secret that had become the envy of the martial arts community.

Plot Summary



Di Yun was a young martial artist who studied under the tutelage of Qi Zhangfa. Along with Qi's daughter Qi Fang , the three of them led a simple life in a remote countryside farm where Di Yun and Qi Fang had plans to marry each other.

Frame-up and imprisonment


One day Qi Zhangfa received an invitation from his senior Wan Zhenshan where Wan claimed he had acquired the ''Lian Cheng Jianfa''. This secret was originally guarded among Qi, Wan and another their martial arts brother Yan Daping , but had thought to have been lost. Surprised by the news, Qi Zhangfa took Di Yun and Qi Fang to visit Wan, only to realize Wan did not actually acquire the article. In the coming scuffles Qi wounded Wan and strangely disappeared, and Di Yun was intentionally framed for the attempted larceny and rape committed on one of Wan's concubines.

Di Yun was tortured in prison, rendering him unable to perform his martial arts skills. In addition to his inexplicable imprisonment, his plight was compounded by the presence of fellow inmate Ding Dian , who beat him regularly. Meanwhile, Qi Fang married Wan Gui, and when the news filtered through to prison, Di Yun attempted to commit suicide, but was saved by Ding. It turns out that Ding mistreated Di Yun because he mistakenly thought Di was spying on him, as Ding too was aware of the secrets of the ''Lian Cheng Jianfa''. Di's suicide attempt was a turning point as Ding no longer held suspicion for Di and went on to teach him powerful martial arts skills.

Ding revealed the reason why he was imprisoned: because he knew of the secrets to ''Lian Cheng Jianfa'', he needed the time to develop his martial arts skills in order to fight off enemies who sought to acquire the secret. He also witnessed Wan, Yan and Qi murdering their master in order to gain the secret, and for the first time, Di gained an insight on the conflicting nature of the three martial brothers, particularly Qi, whose apparently earthy appearance hid his cunning nature.

More Injustice



Ding and Di conspired to escape from prison, however they were heavily pursued. Ding was poisoned by his deceased lover's father, yet his devotion to her was unwavering, asking Di to bury him with his lover.

Di Yun suffered further misfortunes: first he was pursued by Bao Xiang , a monk of the evil ''Crimson Sword Sect'' . Bao Xiang died unexpectedly of food poisoning, so Di Yun took his possessions, resulting in himself being mistaken as a member of the evil Sect. He was saved by the leader of the Sect, Xie Dao Laozu , who thought he was Bao Xiang's disciple, and although Di's life was spared, misunderstanding and injustice against him grew.

Trapped in the Snowy Valley



As the martial arts community began to pursue Xie Dao Laozu, Di Yun followed in the escape path. During their escape, however, an avalanche broke out, trapping the pair in a valley, along with several pursuers, the beautiful young swordstress Shui Sheng and Bei Si Qi . At the end only one member of the Four Remarkables survived. Xie Dao Laozu taught Di Yun more advanced martial arts techniques, which caused much conflict within Di Yun: on the one hand the Crimson Sword Master was evil in his dealings, yet he was also Di's saviour. In an unexpected twist, when Di Yun mercy-killed Shui Sheng's gravely injured father, Xie Dao Laozu suspected him of disloyalty and attacked, helping Di Yun to complete the energy cycle within and killed the master with an unexpected powerful kick to the stomach.

Eventually, the ice blocking the escape path melted, and pursuers for Xie Dao Laozu and Di Yun arrived. Throughout their stay in the Valley, Di Yun conducted himself chivalrously towards Shui Sheng, a young virgin. However the last Remarkable turned to cannibalism to survive gus four-month stay in the valley. In order to cover himself, his launched a pre-emptive strike against the younger two, announcing to the martial arts community that they had slept together, despite him being the murderer of her father. Amidst this injustice, Di Yun escaped the Valley and was forced into hiding.

Revenge



Di Yun returned to search for Qi Zhangfa, only to find the old family home demolished, replaced with a luxurious mansion. Inside the mansion, though, was a massive search site where the new owner hired local peasants to search underground, supposedly for a treasure chest. It became apparent to Di Yun that the new owner is also seeking the secrets to ''Lian Cheng Jianfa''. As it turned out, the new owner is Qi Zhangfa's long-lost martial brother Yan Daping.

Di Yun returned to the Wan's to visit Qi Fang, but was initially reluctant to reveal his identity. Qi Fang witnessed Wan Zhenshan murdering one of his disciples, and in the process discovered that her father was in fact killed by Wan during the scuffle. Qi herself was pursued by Wan Zhenshan and Wan Gui because they suspected her of infidelity, when Di Yun revealed himself and defeated both Wans. Unfortunately, even though Qi try to spare the Wans lives, her husband mercilessly killed her and fled.

Eventually, Di Yun fulfilled his promise to Ding Dian, buried his ashes with his lover, in the process discovered the secrets to ''Lian Cheng Jianfa'' himself: the location of a massive treasure trove. He publicised the secret, lured the Wans out of hiding, and killed Wan Zhenshan at the location of the treasure trove. It was there that Di Yun also became reunited with Qi Zhangfa, who in fact escaped from the scuffle with Wan Zhenshan; however when the masses of martial artists arrived to share the treasure trove, Qi and Wan Gui both died in the ensuring brawls. Di Yun noticed that the treasure was poisoned, but he was too late to save anyone.

Di Yun spurned the opportunity for the massive fortune, instead returned to the Snow Valley with Qi and Wan's daughter, where Shui Shen awaited for his return. The once-naive but always kind-hearted Di Yun received his just rewards at the end: a peaceful life with an ideal partner.

Characters



* Di Yun
* Qi Zhangfa
* Qi Fang
* Wan Zhenshan
* Yan Daping
* Wan Gui
* Ding Dian
* Bao Xiang
* Xie Dao Laozu
* Shui Sheng
* Liu Chengfeng

Ambiguity


A Deadly Secret itself does not clearly state the era in which it happened, as with The Smiling, Proud Wanderer and Ode to Gallantry. However most readers speculate this story should have happened in late Qing Dynasty, judging from the illustrations inside the original Chinese version and Jinyong himself's confessions in the epilogue which stated that he wrote this novel to recognize He Sheng, a servant of his magistrate grandfather. Jinyong claimed He Sheng had a similar fate as Di Yun, and it was his grandfather who took up He Sheng's case, released him, and hired him as servant. Jinyong further stated He Sheng died during the Second Sino-Japanese War period at very high age. As a result, He Sheng's misfortune should have happened in late Qing Dynasty.

Despite these confessions, many commentators feel this novel's plot is quite similar to Alexandre Dumas, père's The Count of Monte Cristo, only under different historical backgrounds. Jinyong himself has not commented on this so far.


TV series


"A Deadly Secret" or "Ling Sing Kuet" is the only Jin Yong wuxia novel was adapted to TVB in 1988. It has 20 episodes all-in-all.

Yellow Peril (novel)

Yellow Peril is a 1991 novel by Wang Lixiong, written in Chinese under the pseudonym Bao Mi , about a civil war in the People's Republic of China that becomes a and soon engulfs the world, causing World War III. It is notable for Wang Lixiong's politics, a Chinese dissident and outspoken activist, its publication following Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, and its popularity due to bootleg distribution across China even when the book was banned by the Communist Party of China.

The book was published in 1991 by ''Mirror Books'', a Chinese editor in Toronto, , and soon became a best-seller.

Translation


*''China Tidal Wave'', Wang Lixiong, Michael Dillon, translation Anton Platero, Editeur Global Books Ltd. , april 2007, EAN13 9781905246502; University of Hawaii Press; april 2008, ISBN 1905246501

Waiting (novel)

Waiting: a Novel is a novel by award-winning author Ha Jin. It received the 1999 National Book Award.
It is about the life of a military officer in modern China who finds himself waiting 18 years to divorce his wife for another woman all the while fearing prosecution for hanging out with the chick he wants to marry.

To Live

To Live is a novel by novelist . It describes the struggles endured by the son of a wealthy land-owner after the Revolution fundamentally alters the nature of Chinese society. The contrast between his pre-revolutionary status as a selfish fool who travels on the shoulders of the downtrodden and his post-revolutionary status as a persecuted peasant are stark.

The novel includes interesting first-hand descriptions of some of the less successful aspects of Collectivist policy, such as communal agriculture and the attempt to build a village-based steel industry.

To Live (film)

To Live is a directed by Zhang Yimou in 1994, starring Ge You and Gong Li and produced by the Shanghai Film Studio and ERA International. It is based on the of the same name by . Having achieved international success with his previous films, ''Ju Dou'' and ''Raise the Red Lantern'', ''To Live'' came with high expectations. It is the first Chinese film that had its foreign distribution rights pre-sold.

The film was banned in Mainland China by the Chinese State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television, due to its satirical portrayal of various policies and campaigns of the Communist government.

''To Live'' was screened at the 1994 New York Film Festival before eventually receiving a limited release in the United States on November 18, 1994.

Synopsis



The story begins some time in the 1940s. Xu Fugui is a local rich man's son and compulsive gambler, who loses his family property to a man named Long'er. His behaviour also causes his long-suffering wife Jiazhen to leave him with their daughter, Fengxia and their unborn son, Youqing.

After he loses his entire family fortune, Fugui eventually reunites with his wife and children, but is forced to start a troupe with a partner named Chunsheng to support his family. The Chinese Civil War is occuring at the time, and both Fugui and Chunsheng are forcibly enlisted into the Kuomintang forces during a performance. After a heavy battle, Fugui and Chunsheng are captured by the forces of the Communist Party of China, where they quickly become entertainers for the troops. Eventually Fugui is able to return home, and once there, finds out that Fengxia has become due to a fever.

After the CPC's victory, Fugui attends a local public trial where the new communist authority convicts Long'er of sabotaging the revolution. Long'er recognises Fugui, and tries to break free from the executioners, but he is brought away and shot. It turns out that Long'er did not want to donate any of his personal wealth to the "people's government" as the communists had hoped, and when they tried to pressure Long'er to do so in the name of "helping" him, they only enraged Long'er further and he decided to all of his property instead of giving it away. No one helped to extinguish the fire due to Long'er's bad reputation, and he quickly was designated a reactionary. When the village cadre mentioned to Fugui that the fire lasted three days and carelessly said that "because the wood used in your family's mansion was very good wood", Fugui was quick to proclaim his innocence by telling the village chief "No! It was not the wood of my family, it was the wood of the counter-revolutionary."

The story moves forward a decade into the future, to the prime of the Great Leap Forward. The local town chief enlists Fugui and Jiazhen to donate all scrap iron in their possession to the national drive to and make weaponry for invading Taiwan. As an entertainer, Fugui performs for the entire town, which has been devoted entirely over to producing steel. Later, the district head, who turns out to be Chunsheng, inadvertently crushes and kills Youqing. At the gravesite of the boy, his mother leaves for him a lunchbox of 20 stale dumplings, which were intended as his lunch for school that day, plus 20 newly made dumplings. Chunsheng arrives at the grave, but his attempts to apologise and compensate the family are rebuffed.

The story moves forward again another decade, to the Cultural Revolution. The village chief advises Fugui's family to burn their shadow puppet drama props, which have been deemed as counter-revolutionary as they are traditional cultural elements. Fengxia is now grown up. Her family arranges for her to meet Wan Erxi, a local leader of the . They fall in love and .

It is then revealed that Chunsheng, the district chief, has been branded a reactionary. He arrives late at night to inform Fugui and Jiazhen that his wife has committed suicide and he plans to do so also. Chunsheng wanted to give all of his money to Fugui's family as a form of his final apology and wished that they accept the money before his death. Jiazhen, who up to that point refused to talk to Chunsheng, tells him to keep living, because "you still owe us a life!"

During Fengxia's childbirth, her parents and husband accompany her to the county hospital, where they find out that nurses are in charge as all doctors have been sent to do hard labor for being "reactionary academic authorities". The nurses tell the family that both the child and mother will be fine, but the family is skeptical, and manages to retrieve a doctor from confinement to oversee the birth. As the doctor has not eaten for several days, Fugui purchases seven steamed buns for him and the family decides to name the son Mantou. However, Fengxia begins to hemorrhage, and the nurses panic, admitting that they do not know what to do. The family and nurses seek the advice of the doctor, but find that he has overeaten and is semiconscious. The family is helpless, and Fengxia dies from hypovolemia.

The movie ends several years later, with the family now consisting of Fugui, Jiazhen, their son-in-law Erxi, and grandson Mantou. The family visits the graves of Youqing and Fengxia, where Jiazhen, as per tradition, leaves dumplings for her son. Erxi buys a box full of young chicks for his son, which they decide to keep in the chest formerly used for the shadow puppet props. The family then sits down to eat, and the film ends.

Awards and nominations


* Cannes Film Festival,
** — Tied with ''Burnt by the Sun''
** Prize of the Ecumenical Jury — Tied with ''Burnt by the Sun''
** — Ge You
** Palme d'Or
* BAFTA Awards,
**
* Golden Globe Awards,
**
* ,
** Best Actress — Gong Li

The True Story of Ah Q

The True Story of Ah Q , is a short episodic novella written by Lu Xun, first published periodically between December 4, 1921 and February 12, 1922. It was later collected in his first short story collection ''Nahan'' in 1923. It is the longest of the stories in the collection. The piece is generally held to be a masterpiece of modern Chinese literature, since it is considered the first piece of work fully to utilize Vernacular Chinese after the 1919 May 4th Movement in China.

Synopsis


The story traces the "adventures" of Ah Q, a man from the peasant, rural class with little education and no definite work. Ah Q is famous for "spiritual victories", Lu Xun's euphemism for self-talk and self-deception even when faced with extreme defeat or humiliation. Ah Q is a bully of the less fortunate but fearful of those who are above him in rank, strength, or power. He persuades himself mentally that he is spiritually "superior" to his oppressors even as he succumbs to their tyranny and suppression. Lu Xun exposes Ah Q's extreme faults as symptomatic of the Chinese national character of his time. The ending of the piece – when Ah Q is carted off to execution for a lowly crime – is equally poignant and .

Metaphor


In Chapter One, the author claims that he could not recall nor verify Ah Q's correct name, a claim that gives the character symbolic anonymity. "Ah" in Chinese is an affectionate prefix for names. "Q" is short for "Quei ," Lu Xun's romanization of what would today be romanized in Hanyu Pinyin as "Guī." However, as there are many characters that are pronounced "quei," the narrator claims he does not know which character he should use, and therefore shortens it to "Q." The deliberate use of a Western letter instead of a Chinese character is a reference to the concepts of the May Fourth movement, which advocated adoption of Western ideas. Another like theory regarding the use of the letter Q, is its aural similarity to '', the Manchu hairstyle which all men in Qing Dynasty China were forced to wear, and which most cut off after the republic was established as a symbol of protest.

Story


Ah Q has no status in the village of Weichang, except for what little he may temporarily gain by lying, stealing, or somehow linking himself with an important person. He wanders all day on the streets and makes a living by stealing and begging, and sometimes by doing low-paid temporary jobs. Ah Q has an "abundant" spiritual life made up of watching others doing things that he considers "foolish" or "rude." Ah Q always feels superior over most people despite the fact that he was also, simultaneously, being looked down upon. Many people actually "enjoy" watching the absurdity and failure of Ah Q, but there are also some people that Ah Q truly respects or fears, such as the landlords and rich citizens.

Ah Q is known for deluding himself into believing he is the victor every time he loses a fight. In one scene, Ah Q is beaten and his silver is stolen. He slaps himself on the face, and because he is the person doing the slapping, he sees himself as the victor. This deep-rooted need to maintain a victorious status even when actually defeated shows the Chinese obsession with maintaining a good appearance to all outsiders to be ridiculous at times.

When Mr. Zhao, an honored landlord of the village, beats Ah Q in a fight, Ah Q considers himself important for having even a tiny association with such a person. Though some villagers suspect Ah Q may have no true association with Mr. Zhao, they do not question the matter closely, and instead give Ah Q more respect for a time. This interaction symbolizes China's tradition of group rewards and punishments--guilt or honor by association.

Ah Q is often close-minded about petty things. When he ventures into a new town and sees that a "long bench" is called a "straight bench," he believes their way to be instantly inferior and totally wrong. Traditionally China since the Ming Dynasty had held to the belief that those outside of China were barbarians, and were close-minded about accepting the accomplishments of other countries.

There is a scene in which Ah Q harasses a small nun to make himself feel better. He pinches her and blames his problems on her. Instead of crying out at the injustice of Ah Q's bullying, the crowd nearby laughs. This symbolizes the "mob mentality" that Lu Xun so detested in the Chinese people which led to their extreme apathy in the face of injustice.

One day, news of Xinhai Revolution comes into town. Both landlord families, the Zhaos and the Chiens, become revolutionaries to keep their power. Some people, under the name of "revolutionary army", rob the houses of the landlords and rich folks. Ah Q also wants to join them and also claim himself a revolutionary, but misses the opportunity to act when the time comes. Finally, Ah Q is arrested as a scapegoat for the plunder and sentenced to death by the new governor.

When Ah Q is asked to sign a confession, he worries that he cannot write his name. The officers tell him to sign a circle instead. Ah Q is so worried about drawing a perfect circle to save face that he is unaware he would be executed until it is too late. Before his death he persuades himself he will be reborn again as a valiant man, and tries to entertain the crowds watching his execution, but fails to remember the correct lines of the Chinese opera he is emulating.

Observations of China


China at the turn of the 20th century, the environment in which the story is set, was facing a significant clash between traditional culture and modern capitalist-industrial ideologies defined by Western nations. However, the downfall of Qing Dynasty and the growth of Western capitalism, as is shown in the novella, had barely any influence on average rural Chinese people according to the novel. The story bears the thought of the author that the ignorance of the masses in China, which was the root of its backward status, could not be saved by a simple change of government. Lu Xun commented that what China really needed was what he called "medicine of the spirit", which might mean modernized education and the resulting changes of social habits. In the novella, such idea is well expressed in an inverted fashion. By presenting the poor living status of masses in China on both material and mental level, the author tried to make people aware of the gruesome reality facing average Chinese people, instead of focusing solely on some academic topics that are hardly related to social issues in China.

The novella also strongly criticised the alleged historic-cultural burden of China, which was formed by the long history of absolute authority of the feudalist order. The feudalist social structure, order and culture are solidified through its two thousand year dominance. As a result of this, enormous social pressure brought on by group punishment and the rigidly-interpreted Civil Service Test both encouraged conformist ways and social hegemony in the Chinese culture. According to Lu Xun, people molded by such cultural environment were obsessed with saving face, proud of its past without any new accomplishments, and accepting without questioning the injustices imposed by authority. But as in most of Lu Xun's works, the criticism offers no clear solution to the problems. However, the mentality favouring science and democracy, which were the main ideals of the Chinese social revolution against feudalist order, was exceptionally strong.

References to modern culture


In modern Chinese language, the "spirit of Ah Q" is now commonly used as a term of mockery to describe anybody who chooses not to face up to reality and deceives himself into believing he is successful.

The Republic of Wine

The Republic of Wine: A Novel is a novel by Mo Yan This novel explores the relationship between and , and comments on government corruption and excesses. It was translated to English by Howard Goldblatt .

The novel has two distinct narrative threads, one of a standard fiction form following a , and the other a between "Mo Yan" and an aspiring author who is a fan of his work. The book contains ten chapters; each chapter contains several parts. The "detective" thread follows a special investigator, Ding Gou'er, sent to rural China to investigate claims of cannibalism. The "letters" thread contains letters exchanged between Li Yidou, an aspiring author, and "Mo Yan", as well as short stories that Li Yidou sends to "Mo Yan". As the novel progresses, the focus shifts from the Ding Gou'er standard narrative thread to the Li Yidou/Mo Yan thread. Some characters appear in both threads.

Plot summary


Chapter one


;1
:Ding Gou'er, 48-year-old special investigator, gets a lift with a "lady " to the Mount Luo Coal Mine, Liquorland , where he has been sent to investigate claims of cannibalism: claims of baby boys prepared as gourmet dishes. He is greeted by the Mine Director and Party Secretary and immediately taken to a banquet in his honour.
;2
:Introductory letter from Li Yidou to Mo Yan. Li is a PhD candidate in liquor studies at Brewers College in Liquorland, and aspiring author. He includes a short story that he wrote after watching ''Red Sorghum'', the film adaption of Mo Yan's novel of the same name.
;3
:Mo Yan's reply to Li Yidou. Mo informs Li that he has sent his story to the editors of ''Citizens' Literature''.
;4
:Li Yidou's short story, ''Alcohol''.

Chapter two


;1
:The Mine Director and Party Secretary treat Ding to an expansive feast, and goad him into drinking copious amounts of alcohol. Ding does not hold his alcohol well. Deputy Head Diamond Jin, a Party official with a notorious capacity for drink, also joins them.
;2
:Second letter from Li to Mo, and Li's second story, ''Meat Boy'', which he calls "grim realism". Li is now bolder, in his requests to Mo's assistance to become a published author, comparing himself to Lu Xun and saying, "If you have to host a meal , go ahead. If a gift is required, you have my blessing."
;3
:Mo's reply to Li, commenting on ''Meat Boy''.
;4
:Li's short story, ''Meat Boy''. One day two parents prepare their baby boy for a special event. The father, Jin Yuanbao, takes the boy on a journey to the Special Purchasing Section of the Culinary Academy in a village across the river. He waits with other parents and sons, perturbed by the presence of a small red demon. His son is eventually assessed by the staff there and judged to be "top grade". Jin is paid 2140.

Chapter three


;1
:The centrepiece of the banquet is revealed, "Stork Delivering a Son". It appears to be a whole human baby boy, sitting up in a dish, and smells delicious. Ding draws his gun and accuses his company of cannibalism. Diamond Jin insists the dish is a culinary masterpiece -- a fake child. Ding panics and fires his gun wildly, shooting the baby boy in the head and collapses, drunk. The serving girls bring him sobering-up soup and he recovers somewhat. Diamond Jin explains how the fake boy is created and convinces Ding to eat a lotus root arm.
:After further drinking, Ding has an out of body experience where he witnesses the serving girls taking his comatose body to an underground hotel room. While his body is there, a "scaly-skinned demon" enters the room and strips his body of useful implements.
;2
:Third letter from Li to Mo.
;3
:Short story ''Child Prodigy'' by Li, in the style of "demonic realism" . It follows the children who were sold at the Special Purchasing Section, and the little demon's attempt to lead them away.
;4
:Mo's reply to Li.




Characters


* Ding Gou'er,
* The lady
* Deupty Head Diamond Jin
* Li Yidou
* Mo Yan
* Little red devil
* Yuan Shuangyu, Li Yidou's academic advisor and father-in-law
* Li Yidou's mother-in-law
* Yu Yichi, a hotelier

Swordswoman Riding West on White Horse

The White Horse in the West Wind is a wuxia novella written by Jinyong. The title in Chinese could be roughly translated to White Horse Neighing in the West Wind. It was first published in 1961 in ''Ming Pao''.
It is the first Jinyong tale featuring a female protagonist.

Plot


The protagonist, Li Wenxiu, lost her parents in Gobi desert while trying to escape from a group of pugilists who wanted their map of the Gaochang labyrinth. Legend has it that the labyrinth contained riches beyond imagination. Placed on a faithful white steed, the young girl fled to an oasis and met a kind elder Ji. Li lived in his house and he took care of Li as if she were his own child.

One night, Li was driven by her curiosity to see birds that were famed to sing well. She met a young Kazakh boy called Su Pu, who was trying to catch the birds. They developed a friendship and soon became a pair of lovers. Li, being an ethnic Han Chinese, did not win the approval of Su Pu's father. Su Pu was beaten by his father on learning that he has fallen for a Han. Some time later, Li was heartbroken to discover that Su Pu had fallen for a Kazakh girl.

Su Pu and Li part for years, but Li didn't forget Su Pu. She saw Su Pu winning a tournament and how he and his lover subsequently reacted. Li was depressed and let her horse wander the Gobi desert. Suddenly, she found herself trapped by the same group of pugilists who attacked her parents 12 years ago. The only way to escape is to ride deeper into the desert, where there were purportedly ghosts for wanderers. The horse galloped in the desert into a hillock with trees and took cover there.

After curing a sick hermit of his sickness caused by three venomous needles, she learnt martial arts from him.

She returned home to sudden, heavy snow. She did not wish to meet Su Pu and his lover, who were taking cover in her house from the snow, so she pretended to be a man who was seeking shelter. The leader of the group of greedy pugilists, Chen Da Hai, noticed Li's house and suspected that Li and the map may be inside. He questioned everyone in the house, and Ji, the man who brought Li up, deceived Chen by saying that Li had died. Chen impolitely ransacked Li's possessions in his search for the map, and angered Su Pu, who still remembered Li after all those years, when he threatened to dig up Li's grave to find the map. Su Pu and his father were subsequently defeated by Chen. Chen eventually found the map, which is an ordinary-looking handkerchief . Li was forced to fight when Chen threatened to kill Su Pu's father and kidnap Su Pu's lover, and managed to severely injure Chen. Amidst the excitement of her victory, everyone fails to notice that Chen escaped into the desert to find the labyrinth.

A group of seven, including Su Pu, Su Pu's father and Li, set off to find Chen and the labyrinth. Tracing Chen's footsteps, they eventually found the labyrinth.

The group somehow found a way to the center of the labyrinth, finding not riches, but books, statues, furniture commonly used in Han society and unexpected horror. A "ghost" scared them away by killing two strong men in the group. The group fled to a grassland near to the labyrinth, in an attempt to warn the soldiers they sent to find the riches. They succeeded in doing so but the "ghost" disturbed their sleep at night. The "ghost" used "magic" to kill horses and a men without touching them.

They were planning to leave when Su Pu suddenly discovered that his lover was kidnapped by the "ghost". Su Pu rushed into the labyrinth to save the girl, forgetting how scary it was the night before. It was revealed at this point that the "ghost" was human, and that his "magic" was actually poisoned needles, and the group's fears were dispelled. Su Pu, Li, Ji, Su Pu's father and Su Pu's lover's father ventured into the labyrinth.

The "ghost" admitted that he was human, exiled by his clan 12 years ago. After that, he learned martial arts from Han people and planned to kill the whole clan by instructing his disciple to poison their well. His disciple did not want anyone to die, so he betrayed his master, poisoning his master with three needles, and eventually became Ji, the elder who raised Li. Upon learning each other's identity, Ji and the "ghost" fought. After injuring each other badly, the "ghost" was revealed to the rest of the group to be the hermit whom Li had saved and who taught her martial arts. Li was shocked to know that the only two people who loved and cared about her were enemies.

The "ghost" attempted to kill everyone in the labyrinth. Fortunately, the fire burned out and it was dark enough for them to flee. Li didn't flee because she wanted to accompany her master before he dies. Wanting Li to accompany him forever, he slowly pushed his poison needle towards Li. Li didn't notice that but the "ghost" died when the poison needle was only inches away from Li.

After leaving the labyrinth, Li found out that it was built by the king of a once-affluent and peaceful country, called Gaochang Guo. The country was forced by the Tang government to submit to the Tang emperor. Had Gaochang Guo accepted, the Tang government would give them many benefits. However, the majority of the country wished to be independent and lead a simple, but happy, existence. When the Tang government sent troops to conquer the Gaochang Guo, its king ordered a labyrinth to be built, within which its people and all their riches could seek refuge. Inevitably, they lost the war and hid in the labyrinth, but were, unfortunately, found quickly, and the Tang soldiers looted all the treasures. The troops wanted to "introduce" the good culture of Han into the "primitive" country, so only common things in Han society were found in the labyrinth.

Miserable from the death of her two loved ones and the marriage of Su Pu to another woman, Li left the oasis, despite the locals' promise of benefits. Just like the king of Gaochang Guo, she said, "The benefits are all very good, but I just don't like them."

Sword Stained with Royal Blood

Sword Stained with Royal Blood was first published in Hong Kong Commercial Daily in 1956. It is a wuxia novel written by the Chinese author Louis Cha under the pen name Jinyong. The book is currently in its third edition and is currently undergoing revision for a fourth edition. Characters from this book play minor roles in Jin Yong's last novel The Deer and the Cauldron.

Plot summary



There are 20 chapters in the 3rd edition of this work.
The plot centers around a master swordman named Yuan Cheng Zhi who witnessed the end of the Ming Dynasty and aided the Li Zicheng rebellion while the Manchurians were invading proper China.

The story begins with a preamble about a Brunei official and his man-servant arriving in China during the late Ming dynasty only to be robbed at knife point. In their escape, they met a group of former soldiers who were under the command of general Yuan Chonghuan. Yuan Chonghuan had been put to death by the emperor unjustly and his men wanted to avenge his death. Li Zicheng had sent an envoy to meet these men in hope that they will aid his rebellion against the emperor. This effectively sets the historical backdrop of the story and introduces Yuan Cheng Zhi, Yuan Chonghuan’s son and hero of the story, as a young teenager with basic martial arts skills but with great potential. The preamble ends with the Brunei official, realising that China at this time was unsafe and in chaos, returning hurriedly to Brunei.

Yuan Cheng Zhi was put under the care of An Da Niang, a friend of Cui Qiu Shan, a former soldier under Yuan Chonghuan, for a while before being sent to Mu Ren Qing, the greatest martial arts teacher alive at that time. Although Mu Ren Qing had already retired, he surprisingly took a liking to Yuan Cheng Zhi and agreed to take Yuan Cheng Zhi in as his final disciple.

Under the teaching of Mu Ren Qing and also Mu Sang, Mu Ren Qing’s close friend, Yuan Cheng Zhi’s martial arts improved tremendously. Serendipitous incidents also led Yuan Cheng Zhi to discover the sword and personal effects, including a secret martial arts manual, of Xia Xue Yi, a long dead enigmatic swordsman with legendary great skills. This allowed Yuan Cheng Zhi’s martial arts to reach a super-human level.

Hoping to aid Li Zicheng's rebellion, Yuan Cheng Zhi left Mount Hua, the residence of Mu Ren Qing, and traveled to Jiangnan where he met Wen Qing Qing, a young lady born into a family of brigands. It was later revealed that Qing Qing was the daughter of Xia Xue Yi. Her family had not approved of the relationship between Xia Xue Yi and Qing Qing’s mother, Wen Yi, and Qing Qing saw Yuan Cheng Zhi as an agent from her dead father to rescue her from her family’s disdain.

Qing Qing’s family had earlier stolen a large amount of gold meant for Li Zicheng’s army and Yuan Cheng Zhi thought it his duty to help An Xiao Hui, his childhood friend and An Da Niang’s daughter, who was looking after the gold to get the gold back. A conflict ensues and the brigands were defeated and had to give up the gold. But in a fit, Qing Qing’s grandfather killed Wen Yi.

After the death of her mother, Qing Qing had no option but to leave with Yuan Cheng Zhi. The two decided to search for hidden treasure based on a map left behind by Xia Xue Yi and traveled to Nanjing.

The treasure is hidden in a villa in Nanjing, owned by Min Zi Hua, a swordsman who wanted to avenge his brother killed by Jiao Gong Li. Min Zi Hua had gathered a large group of martial arts exponents to confront Jiao Gong Li. Yuan Cheng Zhi learns that Xia Xue Yi had rescued Jiao Gong Li many years ago during a similar crisis and decided to assist Jiao Gong Li this time in place of Xia Xue Yi. The ensuing conflict resulted in Min Zi Hua to give up his villa and left Jiao Gong Li alone.

Yuan Cheng Zhi and Qing Qing quickly found the hidden treasure within the villa and decided to donate the treasure to Li Zicheng’s cause. As they transported the treasure to Beijing in preparation for Li Zicheng’s attack on the capital, several gangs of bandits plotted to rob Yuan Cheng Zhi but none could defeat him in combat.

When a group of passing government soldiers also attempted to rob Yuan Cheng Zhi, he was outraged and helped the bandits defeat the soldiers. Coincidentally, the soldiers were transporting some of Yuan Chonghuan’s men as prisoners charged with assisting Li Zicheng and Yuan Cheng Zhi rescued them.

The bandits in admiration of Yuan Cheng Zhi’s uprightness, patriotism and combat skills pledged allegiance to him. Yuan Cheng Zhi was then able to organize them to repel the army of the northern Qing Empire who frequently raided northern parts of China at that time.

Wanting to do more for his country, Yuan Cheng Zhi traveled alone to the capital of Qing and attempted to assassinate Huang Taiji, the but failed. However, Huang Taiji was eventually assassinated by his brother, wanting to inherit the throne, and Yuan Cheng Zhi returned to Beijing.

As Li Zicheng’s rebellion gathered pace and his men closed in on the capital, the emperor employed a group of skilled warriors to be his bodyguards, notably He Tie Shou, a young woman with a hook for her left hand and leader of a cult skilled in the use of poison.

Jiao Gong Li’s daughter, Jiao Wan Er approached Yuan Cheng Zhi for help, informing him her father had been killed and Min Zi Hua was the prime suspect. However, Yuan Cheng Zhi was able to show that Min Zi Hua was innocent and Jiao Wan Er eventually identified the killers as Tai Bai Shuang Ying, two treacherous swordsmen, who were also among the group of bodyguards employed to protect the emperor. Yuan Cheng Zhi and Jiao Wan Er infiltrated the emperor’s palace and killed Tai Bai Shuang Ying.

While in the palace, Yuan Cheng Zhi also discovered that Ah Jiu, a young lady who frequently associated herself with the bandits under Yuan Cheng Zhi, was actually Princess Changping, the emperor’s daughter living in the palace. When Li Zicheng’s army eventually invaded the capital and removed the emperor from power, thus ending the Ming Dynasty. Yuan Cheng Zhi felt his job was done and, not willing to involve himself in politics, left the capital, bringing along He Tie Shou and Ah Jiu to Mount Hua to reunite with Mu Ren Qing.

Shortly after, Li Zicheng’s army was driven out of the capital by General Wu Sangui's soldiers with assistance from Qing troops. The Shun Dynasty came to an end and was replaced by the Qing dynasty. Yuan Cheng Zhi, devastated by the turn of events, left China for good together with Qing Qing, He Tie Shou, Jiao Wan Er, Luo Li Ru, some friends from Mount Hua, his father’s former soldiers, and his bandit followers.

Characters


* Yuan Cheng Zhi
* Wen Qing Qing
* Princess Chang Ping / Ah Jiu

Film, TV and theatrical adaptations


Television series




Films