Available Formats
Tiananmen Square: 'Extraordinary' William Boyd
By (Author) Lai Wen
Swift Press
Swift Press
30th July 2024
4th June 2024
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Hardback
528
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
'An extraordinary book. Truly important' - William Boyd
A stunning, deeply moving novel about growing up in Beijing in the 1970s and 80s and taking part in Tiananmen Square protests
It is Beijing in the 1970s, and Lai lives with her parents, grandmother and younger brother in a small flat in a working-class area. Her grandmother is a formidable figure - no-nonsense and uncompromising, but loving towards her granddaughter - while her ageing beauty of a mother snipes at her father, a sunken figure who has taken refuge in his work.
As she grows up, Lai comes to discern the realities of the country she lives is: an early encounter with the police haunts her for years; her father makes her see that his quietness is a reaction to experiences he has lived through; and an old bookseller subtly introduces her to ideas and novels that open her mind to different perspectives. But she also goes through what anyone goes through when young - the ebbs and flows of friendships; troubles and rewards at home and at school; and the first steps and missteps in love.
A gifted student, she is eventually given a scholarship to study at the prestigious Peking University; while there she meets new friends, and starts to get involved in the student protests that have been gathering speed. It is the late 1980s, and change is in the air...
A truly remarkable novel about coming to see the world as it is, Tiananmen Square is the story of one girl's life growing up in the China of the 1970s and 80s, as well as the story of the events in 1989 that give the novel its name: the hope and idealism of a generation of young students, their heroism and courage, and the price that some of them paid.
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'An extraordinary book. Truly important' - William Boyd
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'A touching story of Tiananmen memory, just like a fireside whisper with love and tears. Lai Wen is a brilliant storyteller' - Xinran
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'Acute and intimate' - Bookseller
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Lai Wen is a pseudonym. She was born in Beijing in 1970 and left China after the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. She now lives in the UK with her husband and two daughters.