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Book Cover for: The Invisible Valley, Su Wei

The Invisible Valley

Su Wei

Lu Beiping is one of 20 million young adults the Chinese government uproots and sends far from their homes for agricultural re-education. And Lu is bored and exhausted. While he pines for romance, instead he's caught up in a forbidden religious tradition and married off to the foreman's long-dead daughter so that her soul may rest. The foreman then sends him off to cattle duty up on Mudkettle Mountain, far away from everyone else.

On the mountain, Lu meets an outcast polyamorous family led by a matriarch, Jade, and one of her lovers, Kingfisher. They are woodcutters and practice their own idiosyncratic faith by which they claim to placate the serpent-demon sleeping in the belly of the mountains. Just as the village authorities get wind of Lu's dalliances with the woodcutters, a typhoon rips through the valley. And deep in the jungle, a giant serpent may be stirring.

The Invisible Valley is a lyrical fable about the shapes into which human affection can be pressed in extreme circumstances; about what is natural and what is truly deviant; about the relationships between the human and the natural, the human and the divine, the self and the other.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Small Beer Press
  • Publish Date: Apr 3rd, 2018
  • Pages: 400
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.40in - 5.40in - 1.00in - 1.00lb
  • EAN: 9781618731456
  • Categories: LiteraryBiographicalHistorical - General

About the Author

Woerner, Austin: - Austin Woerner's translations include two poetry collections, Doubled Shadows: Selected Poetry of Ouyang Jianghe and Phoenix. He was the English translation editor for the Chinese literary journal Chutzpah! and co-edited Chutzpah!: New Voices from China. He holds a BA in East Asian Studies from Yale and an MFA from the New School. He is a lecturer at Duke Kunshan University in Shanghai, China.
Wei, Su: - Like many Chinese writers of his generation, Su Wei spent his teenage years being "re-educated" through farm labor in the countryside, working for ten years on a rubber plantation in the mountains of tropical Hainan Island. He is known for his nonfiction essays as well as for his highly imaginative novels, which are seen as unique in their treatment of the Cultural Revolution. He left China in 1989, and since 1997 he has taught Chinese language and literature at Yale University. The Invisible Valley is his first book to be translated into English.

Praise for this book

"The Invisible Valley is an extraordinary novel. It opens, even to Chinese readers, the world of a southern hinterland, a world of rubber groves, mystery and superstition. At the same time, the novel is intimately rooted in China's modern history and resonates with universal implications. Austin Woerner's vivid and supple translation has made it even more readable."
-- Ha Jin, winner of the National Book Award

"Su Wei's The Invisible Valley is a rich romantic story told with sharp humor and filled with vivid descriptions of the lush, dense highlands of a remote Chinese tropical island. Translated with a light hand and subtle wit by Austin Woerner, the novel moves in quick graceful stages after its hapless young hero, Lu Beiping, discovers to his dismay that he's been ghost-married to a dead girl. Bizarre folkways, rituals and superstitions abound, along with hints of a great serpent awakening. It's a joy to read such a strange, wonderful tale by a Chinese master in this brisk and lucid translation." -- Patrick McGrath, author of Asylum

"Su Wei's remarkable novel The Invisible Valley has drawn praise in Chinese literary circles both inside and outside China. Su Wei belongs to the generation of Chinese writers who 'went down to the countryside' at the behest of Chairman Mao in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and his novel was inspired by his personal experience in the wild, semi-tropical hills of Hainan Island in China's far south. The power of this natural background--typhoons, jungles, giant snakes, pungent odors, and more--pervades the work and melds into the vivid human characters that populate it."


-- Perry Link, Emeritus Professor of Chinese, Princeton University