Reviews

Silk Road: A Novel of Eighth-Century China by Jeanne Larsen

proseandpostre's review against another edition

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5.0

Such a beautiful, and intricate story, unlike anything I’ve read before! The highest praise I can give a book is by rereading it, and I just know that I’ll have to visit these mountains, rivers, and celestial planes again! Hoping some talented soul stumbles across this gem and makes a visual masterpiece for the ages!!

hamb0rgler36's review against another edition

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2.0

I got about halway through the book and decided that perhaps I'd placed a little too much faith in it. It's not a terrible book, please don't misunderstand; it just wasn't something that could hold my interest long enough for me to finish it. I had a similar problem with the Twilight series. lol

firecat's review

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5.0

[b:Silk Road|701596|Shadow of the Silk Road|Colin Thubron|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1177409819s/701596.jpg|1443190] is a beautifully written, richly descriptive, meandering story of a young woman who is trying to find her family and who, along the way, finds her own power. It weaves together history, story, mythology, and poetry. Interspersed with the story (the chapters named "Parrot Speaks") are a number of fragmentary 8th-century Chinese texts, translated by the author, along with prose poems that address the reader directly.

The story itself and its writing style kinda scratched the same itch for me that Little, Big by [a:John Crowley|52074|John Crowley|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1223869920p2/52074.jpg] does. I'm failing to come up with the right words to describe the similarities, though.

In Silk Road's descriptions of the life of a courtesan I am reminded a bit of the popular [b:Memoirs of a Geisha|930|Memoirs of a Geisha|Arthur Golden|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1157749066s/930.jpg|1558965] (which was written quite a while later). But Memoirs of a Geisha is in the end a thoroughly conventional romance novel. Silk Road isn't conventional and isn't a romance-genre novel at all.

I don't know very much about Chinese culture, history, or mythology, except what I learn from watching Yimou Zhang (House of Flying Daggers) and Jet Li movies. I expect people who know more about those things would get more out of this book.

Finally, I'm going to describe how I found out about this book, because it amuses me. I am involved with a Buddhist sangha called Insight Meditation Center. A frequent guest speaker at this sangha is Thanissaro Bhikkhu, abbot of Metta Forest Monastery in California. I really like his dharma talks. So I was reading about him on the Web one day and I came across this interview with him in the Oberlin alumni magazine:
http://www.oberlin.edu/alummag/spring2004/feat_monk.html

In the interview, he was asked whether he reads for pleasure and he said that the only fiction he reads is [a:Jeanne Larsen|35009|Jeanne Larsen|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1219701209p2/35009.jpg] and Harry Potter. That seemed like a good reason for me to check out Jeanne Larsen's books!
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