Beijing Sprawl

$17.95
by Zechen Xu

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Stories of friendship, failure, and survival from Xu Zechen, author of “some of the most exciting and energized writing coming out of China now.” (Paul French) Muyu, a seventeen-year-old from a small village, came to Beijing for his piece of the dream: money, love, a good life. But in the city, daily life for him and his friends—purveyors of fake IDs and counterfeit papers—is a precarious balance of struggle and guile. Surveying the neighborhood from the rooftop of the apartment they all share, the young men play cards, drink beer, and discuss their aspirations, hoping for the best but expecting little more than the comfort of each other’s company. In these connected stories translated from Chinese by Eric Abrahamsen and Jeremy Tiang, Xu’s characters observe as others like them—workers, students, drifters, and the just plain unlucky—get by the best ways they know how: by jogging excessively, herding pigeons, building cars from scraps, and holding their friends close through the miasma of so-called progress. “Seventeen-year-old Muyu leaves his rural village to make a life in Beijing, where things aren’t always as great as they seem from afar. He lives with three friends in a dusty apartment, and in Xu’s stories detailing their travails, we learn about how a changing city can change its people, too, both for the good and for the bad. In a place that’s constantly evolving, can one ever truly feel at home? Muyu and his friends aren’t quite sure, but they’re going to try their best despite all odds.” —NPR “[Against] the Chinese government’s emphasis on innovation and overwork...the protagonists of Beijing Sprawl aren’t running to get ahead; they’re running so they don’t go insane. And, significantly, no matter where the narrator jogs, he always ends up back where he began....Instead of allegorizing success, Xu uses running as a metaphor for long-term precarity.”  —Mark Breitwater, 4 Columns “There’s a lot that’s compelling about Beijing Sprawl , from the vivid descriptions of the titular city to the unpredictability that’s habitual for many of this book’s characters—and sometimes leads them to unsettling fates. Xu Zechen’s tales of Beijing and the lives on its margins have a relationship to that city much like the one Irvine Welsh’s fiction has to Edinburgh—writing that’s at once an evocation and a demystification of the city where it’s set.” —Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders “Translated by Jeremy Tiang and Eric Abrahamsen, Xu Zechen’s Beijing Sprawl introduces us to a ragtag quartet of would-be social climbers. The high cost of urban living, accompanied by thundering tedium and punctuated with shocking violence, proves to be a devilishly swirling drain from which there can be no escape in Xu’s interconnected fictions.” —Justin Walls, The Cercador Prize “Cliché is generally considered toxic in writing, but Beijing Sprawl , a newly translated collection of connected stories, embraces it.…For a book about urban migrants hoping to eclipse the tired rhythms of their own daily lives, the repetition comes across as a literary choice. The connected stories unfold with a looping circularity that made me feel disoriented and déjà vu at the same time.…The book’s nine stories riff off one another, and their repetitive form gets at the frustrating contradiction inherent in Xu’s characters’ lives: one of constant motion and social immobility.” —William McCormack, The China Project “People like Muyu and his friends may seem invisible in a sprawling, modern city like Beijing, but Xu and translators Tiang and Abrahamsen show that they have as much of a pulse on the city as the more well-to-do characters more typical in novels and memoirs.” — Asian Review of Books “Tinged with surrealism, realism, dry humor, and whimsicality, author Xu Zechen writes tragedy in a way that makes it seem so big and small simultaneously.…The short stories within Beijing Sprawl are as much about the toil of the working class as they are about the people you meet along the way.” — Asia Media International “In author Xu Zechen’s telling, there are few urban destinations more unforgiving than Beijing. A city that sucks in migrants and drifters, chews them up and spits them out again, China’s capital is where high-school dropout Muyu and his friends go searching for “greener” pastures in this collection of interrelated stories…a highly enjoyable quasi-sequel to 2014’s Running through Beijing.” —China Book Review “Muyu, picaresque hero of ‘The Six-Eared Macaque,’ is a transplant from the countryside, having moved to Beijing because he had no other prospects. He shares a tenement flat with three other young men, all of whom aspire to greatness despite the squalor and high cost of city life. Each of the young derelicts crosses paths with various colorful Beijing denizens.… With money scarce and cops sweeping through residences with batons and bulldozers, the episodes often end in irony and tragedy.” —Publ

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