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Wolf Totem [Audio]
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A controversial Chinese tale of environmental destruction, spiritual freedom and the threat modernity.

About the Author

Jiang Rong was born in Jiangsu in 1946. His father's job saw the family move to Beijing in 1957, and Jiang entered the Central Academy of Fine An in 1966.

His education cut short by events in China, the twenty-one-year-old Jiang volunteered to work in Inner Mongolia's East Ujimchin Banner in 1967, where he lived and labored with the native nomads until the age of thirty-three. He took with him two cases filled with Chinese translations of Western literary classics, and spent eleven years immersed in personal studies of Mongolian history, culture, and tradition. In particular, he developed a fascination for the mythologies surrounding the wolves of the grasslands, spending much of his leisure time learning the stories and raising an orphaned wolf cub.

In 1978 he returned to Beijing, continuing his education at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences one year later. Jiang worked as an academic until his retirement in 2006. Jason Culp has been an actor since he was ten years old, with a variety of television, regional theatre and film roles to his credit. Over the past 14 years he has also put together a sturdy track record as a voiceover artist. Add to this his forays into cabaret singing and, more recently, his work on an elaborate memoir of his mad 70s upbringing, and you have yourself a well-rounded renaissance man.

Reviews

"A book like no other. Memorable."
*Adrienne Clarkson, Chair of the Man Asian Literary Prize*

"Set to become an
international hit."
*The Independent*

A publishing sensation in China, this novel wraps an ecological warning and political indictment around the story of Chen Zhen, a Beijing student sent during the 1960s Cultural Revolution to live as a shepherd among the herdsmen of the Olonbulang, a grassland on the Inner Mongolia steppes. Chen Zhen is fascinated by the herdsmen, descendants of Genghis Khan, and by the grassland's wolves, with whom the herdsmen live in uneasy harmony. When Mao's government orders the mass execution of the wolves to make way for farming collectives run by Chen Zhen's own people, the Han Chinese, he makes for a somewhat passive hero. Except for Bilgee, the wise old herdsman, and Director Bao, the face of the Communist government in the Olonbulang, the novel's secondary characters make little impression. The wolf packs, however, are vividly and beautifully described. As Chen Zhen helplessly witnesses the consequences of the order, he risks the enmity of both the herdsmen and the state officials by capturing a wolf cub and lovingly raising it as his own wolf totem. Jiang Rong writes reverently about life on the steppes in a manner that recalls Farley Mowat's Never Cry Wolf. (Mar.) Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

"A book like no other. Memorable." -- Adrienne Clarkson, Chair of the Man Asian Literary Prize
"Set to become an international hit." -- The Independent

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