A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers
Xiaolu Guo, . . Doubleday/Talese, $23.95 (283pp) ISBN 978-0-385-52029-4
A young woman from rural China learns how to comprehend “love” and “heartbreak” in English in this quirky, touching novel. Zhuang, or “Z” to tongue-tied foreigners, arrives in London at age 23 after being dispatched by her parents to get an education. Her immersion and painful education are laid bare to readers, who witness Z's vocabulary, grammar and understanding blossom throughout her diarylike account, sped along by an intense romance with a man met at the cinema. Her consuming love begins promisingly, but her failure to interpret her lover's lifestyle as a hippie drifter (who's 20 years her senior) alerts readers to potential trouble in paradise, even while such a notion remains beyond Z's not-yet-jaded imagination. The novel overflows with gentle jokes about culture shock and language barriers including Z's inability to understand why Brits bother talking about the weather when it's obvious—but there are deeper observations beneath the humor. Z's comically earnest exploration of a sex shop illuminates the pathos of Western seediness, and her encounters with men reveal both the exploitative and meaningful sides of romance. Z's unique, evolving voice fits perfectly for a heroine whose naïveté is matched by a willingness to relay the truth.
Reviewed on: 06/25/2007
Genre: Fiction
Hardcover - 353 pages - 978-0-7011-8114-7
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