Tongwan City

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
CN Times Books
Publication Date
[2013]
Language
English

Description

Twenty years ago, Gao Jianqun's bestselling novel The Last Hun popularized ancient Chinese legend and renewed interest in the earliest periods of Chinese history and culture. In Tongwan City, Gao relates an epic saga of murder and compassion in the grassland kingdom of the ancient Chinese frontier, while telling a parallel story of knowledge blooming in the center of Chinese life. Gao weaves into this tale seminal themes of Chinese history and culture: the connection between the warlike Xiongnu and their cousins the Huns, the Great Wall that was built to separate the Xiongnu from the Han Chinese, and the philosophy that ultimately united them.

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ISBN
9781627740067

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Publisher's Weekly Review

Jianqun (The Last Hun) returns to ancient China to depict the exciting but short, life of the Xiongnu warlord Helian Bobo from his birth in a wagon to his death in a sheep enclosure. In the time between those moments, he survives the massacre of his family and betrayal by allies to unify his people into a force able to carve out for a time an impressive empire and found the eponymous city, only known city of the nomadic Xiongnu. Along the way he will demonstrate a prodigious talent for war and shameless betrayal. The accomplishments of the founder of the short-lived Xia empire is contrasted with the more lasting legacy of the monk Kumarajiva, then revolutionizing Chinese Buddhism. Although the link between Hun and Xiongnu is open to question, the author uses that connection and Helian Bobo's supposed blood relationship with Attila to draw illuminating parallels between the careers of the two warlords, both operating in times of imperial collapse. Translated by Eric Mu, this novel ambles back and forth through time, leaping from one event to another to produce an astonishingly compact epic tale. Nevertheless the book provides an exciting entryway into the complex and relatively obscure history of ancient China. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Jianqun (The Last Hun) returns to ancient China to depict the exciting but short, life of the Xiongnu warlord Helian Bobo from his birth in a wagon to his death in a sheep enclosure. In the time between those moments, he survives the massacre of his family and betrayal by allies to unify his people into a force able to carve out for a time an impressive empire and found the eponymous city, only known city of the nomadic Xiongnu. Along the way he will demonstrate a prodigious talent for war and shameless betrayal. The accomplishments of the founder of the short-lived Xia empire is contrasted with the more lasting legacy of the monk Kumarajiva, then revolutionizing Chinese Buddhism. Although the link between Hun and Xiongnu is open to question, the author uses that connection and Helian Bobo's supposed blood relationship with Attila to draw illuminating parallels between the careers of the two warlords, both operating in times of imperial collapse. Translated by Eric Mu, this novel ambles back and forth through time, leaping from one event to another to produce an astonishingly compact epic tale. Nevertheless the book provides an exciting entryway into the complex and relatively obscure history of ancient China. (Oct.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC
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PW Annex Reviews

Jianqun (The Last Hun) returns to ancient China to depict the exciting but short, life of the Xiongnu warlord Helian Bobo from his birth in a wagon to his death in a sheep enclosure. In the time between those moments, he survives the massacre of his family and betrayal by allies to unify his people into a force able to carve out for a time an impressive empire and found the eponymous city, only known city of the nomadic Xiongnu. Along the way he will demonstrate a prodigious talent for war and shameless betrayal. The accomplishments of the founder of the short-lived Xia empire is contrasted with the more lasting legacy of the monk Kumarajiva, then revolutionizing Chinese Buddhism. Although the link between Hun and Xiongnu is open to question, the author uses that connection and Helian Bobo's supposed blood relationship with Attila to draw illuminating parallels between the careers of the two warlords, both operating in times of imperial collapse. Translated by Eric Mu, this novel ambles back and forth through time, leaping from one event to another to produce an astonishingly compact epic tale. Nevertheless the book provides an exciting entryway into the complex and relatively obscure history of ancient China. (Oct.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC
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