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Original Title: The Crazed
ISBN: 1400032148 (ISBN13: 9781400032143)
Edition Language: English
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The Crazed Paperback | Pages: 336 pages
Rating: 3.5 | 2108 Users | 200 Reviews

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Professor Yang, a respected teacher of literature, has had a stroke and it falls to Jian Wan - who is also engaged to Yang's daughter - to care for him. It initially seems a simple duty until the professor begins to rave, pleading with invisible tormentors and denouncing his family...

Are these just manifestations of illness, or is Yang spewing up the truth? In a China convulsed by the Tiananmen uprising, those who listen to the truth are as much at risk as those who speak it. Lyrical and heart-breaking, The Crazed is an incisive portrait of modern Chinese society.

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Title:The Crazed
Author:Ha Jin
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 336 pages
Published:2005 by Random House (first published October 2002)
Categories:Fiction. Cultural. China. Historical. Historical Fiction. Literature. Asian Literature. Chinese Literature. Asia

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Ratings: 3.5 From 2108 Users | 200 Reviews

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a simple read, and at first, you're thinking,what the heck is this about? because each chapter goes off into different tangents, and you're trying to grasp Jian's thoughts, but you don't really follow--and that itself is intriguing. So by the end, you're still wondering and putting the puzzle pieces together. Interesting read and totally worthwhile if you're searching for banned books.

For the fact that I had to review an online synapsis of what this book was about, says it all. Cold, boring, and a teaser in the beginning you can see coming from a mile away. I grabbed it because the author is a celebrated Boston University professor, and he had acclaim for his previous book. This thin read is definitely thin. Tiananmen Square flashback and a strained relationship. Skip!

Staggering. Without a doubt this is Ha Jin's finest, most important novel. I was fairly stunned by the extraordinary War Trash, but this one is more cogent and obviously more personal, filled with gut-wrenching urgency, cynicism, and despair.

Ha Jin is subtle. He doesn't beat us over the head with an overview of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. So the non-Chinese reader can be a little lost here without that background. The best preparation I can think of is Nien Cheng's magnificent Life and Death in Shanghai. The Cultural Revolution was a world turned upside down. Anyone subject to foreign influencesintellectuals, officials, students, artists and dissidentswas labeled a "rightist" or "counterrevolutionary." They were humiliated,

This really had made me see and feel the frustrations of someone in that point of history. Do I dare dream again?

This was an amazing book, from start to finish. The writing is lucid, illuminating, often begging for re-savoring. The plot is relatively straightforward, proceeding forward with only essential looks in the rear view mirror. The characters are memorable, finely sketched and despite the cultural divide, relatively easy to relate to.The story begins when a Chinese literature professor has a stroke, a somewhat unusual stroke, and his future son-in-law and devoted student is called to the hospital

The Crazed tells the story of Jien Wen, a graduate student in China during the Tienanmen Square uprising. When his soon to be father-in-law, and academic mentor, suffers a debilitating stroke, Jien is tasked as one of his caretakers. Jien spends every afternoon attempting to study for his PhD qualifying exams, but instead finds himself distracted by his old professor's ranting and raving about Mao and the weaknesses of being an academic. At first, Jien dismisses everything as the delusional