Letters Back To Ancient China

Author: Herbert Rosendorfer; Mike Mitchell (Translator)

Stock information

General Fields

  • : $32.95 AUD
  • : 9781873982976
  • : Dedalus Books Limited
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  • : 0.272
  • : June 2003
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  • : books

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  • : Herbert Rosendorfer; Mike Mitchell (Translator)
  • : Paperback
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  • : 833.9/14
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  • : 274
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Barcode 9781873982976
9781873982976

Description

A 10th-century Chinese mandarin travels forward in time, and writes letters home reporting on the strange land of 'Zha-ma-ni' in which he is surrounded by giants with big noses, and frightened by the iron carriages called 'mo-tao-ka'. We gradually realise that he is in present-day Munich, and the hapless voyager's encounters with modern life and love, make delightful reading.' Scotland on Sunday 'Witty, lively and idiosyncratic.' Times Literary Supplement 'We view contemporary society through the eyes of one unaccustomed to our ways, which proves to be both a refreshing and enlightening experience.The author's prose sparkles with an idiosyncratic humour, resulting in a charming read.' Buzz Magazine 'Letters Back to Ancient China is a satire on modern life in the vein of Gulliver's Travels, with a little bit of Asterix thrown in. And though it may lack the imaginative scope of the latter, it is not without its own peculiar charm. The story sees a tenth-century Chinese civil servant journey forward through time to 1980s Munich. From here he sends home a series of letters filled with fantastic tales from the future. Our hero, Kao-Tai, is beautifully drawn as an inquisitive and sexually voracious time-traveller. Appalled by the noise and dirt of our world, he comes to view our society as terminally obsessed by progress, without care for the consequences. Whilst some of the observations are a little obvious -'aren't we silly rushing about all the time'- Rosendorfer's lightly comic touch and the effervescence of his main character, keep things racing along. And here translator Mike Mitchell should take great credit too. More contentious is the elitist nature of the few things Kao-Tai comes to value. Our neutral' hero, unsullied by this filthy world, likes expensive champagne, Beethoven, Mozart, Goethe and Titian, but sees nothing worthwhile in modern music, sport, TV, beer; in fact just about everything popular apart from sex. The marriage of high-culture snobbery with playful fantasy is a combination that, strangely struck a chord in eighties Germany. Since publication more than twenty years ago, Letters Back to Ancient China sold over two million copies.' The Big Issue