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BookDragon Blog

01 Nov / Twenty Fragments of a Ravenous Youth by Xiaolu Guo [in Bloomsbury Review]

twenty fragments of a ravenous youthAlthough published over a decade ago in Guo’s native China – and since reworked in English by the author herself – Guo’s story set in a new China rushing toward modernization will surely have a long 21st-century shelf life. Guo’s young heroine, Fenfang, is a naïve yet determined village girl looking for love in all the wrong places in too-rapidly changing contemporary Beijing. Without any precedents to guide her, she turns to the available pop culture around her – pirated and out of date … Betty Blue? Tennessee Williams? – as she struggles between homesickness for her family and old life and working to create an accurate new identity.

Review: “TBR’s Editors’ Favorites of 2008,” The Bloomsbury Review, November/December 2008

Readers: Adult

Published: 2008 (United States)

By SIBookDragon in Adult Readers, Chinese, Fiction, Repost Tags > Bloomsbury Review, BookDragon, Coming-of-age, Friendship, Love, Twenty Fragments of a Ravenous Youth, Xiaolu Guo
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  • Pingback:Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China by Xiaolu Guo [in Christian Science Monitor] | BookDragon Reply

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