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A Free Life

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A Free Life

by Ha Jin

Pantheon, HK$205

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While the rest of the world is fixated on China's steepening growth, the most recognised Chinese novelist is focusing on his American life. Ha Jin's fifth novel is less about the mainland than a migrant family's struggle to throw off as much of its culture and mindset as required to keep pace with the west. A Free Life was written in English and few of its 660 pages are set in China. The biggest departure for Ha Jin is the loss of the conciseness that won him the National Book Award and two PEN/Faulkner awards in the US.

A Free Life is baggy and wandering yet quotidian and apparently autobiographical in parts. The story doggedly follows the bookish and indecisive Nan Wu for 12 years from 1989, when he collects his son from the airport: Nan has been in Boston for the previous three years preparing a life for Taotao and his wife, Pingping.

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He studies for a doctorate in political science while the couple maintain the house of a wealthy, complacent American family. Nan loses interest in politics and is fantasising about becoming a poet when his Chinese passport is cancelled shortly after he makes indiscreet remarks about the Tiananmen Square crackdown to mainland expatriates.

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