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The Banquet Bug [Hardcover]

Geling Yan (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 12, 2006
From the acclaimed author of The Lost Daughter of Happiness comes a groundbreaking novel that will introduce readers to the little-known underworlds of contemporary China

Geling Yan captivates readers once more in her breakthrough novel. This is the fantastical tale of Dan Dong, an unemployed factory worker whose life takes a series of unexpected twists after he discovers that, by posing as a journalist, he can eat exquisite gourmet meals for free at state-sponsored banquets. But the secrets he overhears at these events eventually lead Dan down a twisted, intrigue-laden path, and his subterfuge and his real identity become harder and harder to separate. When he becomes privy to a scandal that runs from the depths of society to its highest rungs, Dan must find a way to uncover the corruption -- without revealing the dangerous truth about himself.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Yan, whose short fiction was the basis for the movie Xiu Xiu: The Sent-Down Girl, offers a pointed critique of capitalism's rise in her native China. A multifaceted mistaken-identity farce, Yan's novel chronicles the adventures of Dan Dong, a laid-off factory worker who wanders into a lavish banquet where journalists are wined and dined and receive "money for your troubles" fees for listening to—and hopefully reporting on—the presentations of corporations and charities. Dan quickly orders business cards that "said he was a reporter from some Internet news site," and hops aboard the banquet gravy train. Yan revels in the absurdity of her premise, and her over-the-top descriptions of banquet fare underscore her outrage at the few who gorge themselves on "animals from remote mountains and forests" while millions starve. The story changes gears, though, when Dan's reportage leads him into a dangerous, far-reaching scandal and he is arrested during a crackdown on "banquet bugs." Yan's concept is clever, but wooden dialogue and some awkward descriptions make it clear that English is not her mother tongue, though this also leads to some seductively nuanced moments ("He smells rather than hears her words carried on her smoky breath") that hint at her enormous potential. (July 11)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Journalists who attend banquets in Beijing to promote a cause or a product are also given "a little something for their trouble." Dan Dong, an unemployed factory worker, is one of these journalists, but he has no credentials: he is a banquet bug. Through this new career he meets a variety of people, several of whom are impressed by his prevaricating. They beg him to listen to their tales of woe and to write about them, in hopes of addressing the wrongs done to them or to their families. Dan becomes deeply concerned for them but also feels increasingly like their desperate hope, and not a real person anymore. A fable, perhaps a satire, this is a rather difficult book to read. It's edgy, it's strange, and the story is somewhat convoluted, giving the reader the sense it was meant to be funnier than most will find it. But the author did succeed, if indeed it was her intention, in depicting a distressing level of corruption and totalitarianism in the China she left behind. Recommended for large libraries. Maureen O'Connor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Hyperion (July 12, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1401366651
  • ISBN-13: 978-1401366650
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 6.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,036,643 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Charming Satire about the Relativity of Truth in China, October 22, 2006
By 
Steve Koss (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Banquet Bug (Hardcover)
Russians have long been notorious for their satirical view of life under the Communist Party government and their willingness to invent jokes about it. For example: "After waiting five hours in line to buy meat, in the dead of winter, Igor begins to snap. He starts jumping up and down, yelling, "I can't stand it anymore! This developed socialism sucks! The system is totally corrupt!" After a couple of minutes, a grim-looking type in a black trenchcoat approaches Igor, shakes his head slowly, points his finger to Igor's temple mimicking a pistol, then walks off without saying a word. Igor comes home especially dejected. His wife asks, "What's the matter? Are they out of meat again?" "Worse," Igor says. "They're out of ammo."

The Chinese are not as well known for cynically humorous self-criticism, but Yan Geling's THE BANQUET BUG adds admirably to an emergent wave of such books from Ma Jian (THE NOODLE MAKER), Ha Jin (THE CRAZED, WAITING), Dai Sijie (MR. MUO'S TRAVELING COUCH), and Annie Wong (THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF DESIRE). Ms. Yan tells the story of Dan Dong, an emigrant from rural China into Beijing, where he has become a married but unemployed factory worker. Dan and his wife, Little Plum, live in an unused part of the factory, subsisting on canned goods that have passed their expiration date, electricity tapped from the nearly defunct factory, and industrial waste water of indeterminate but suspect quality. One day, Dan inadvertently gets invited to a media event that includes a sumptuous banquet of exotic dishes along with an envelope containing "money for your troubles," the Chinese way of buying good press coverage. Thus begins Dan's new career as a "banquet bug," a person who falsely represents himself as a journalist in order to enjoy the banquets and receive the money for his troubles.

The bulk of Ms. Yan's novel follows Dan's misadventures as he gradually evolves into a poor man's journalist, inadequately educated for the role but instinctively honest in his desire to report truth and express outrage at corruption and injustice. No matter what Dan does or how uninformed he is, he miraculously manages to make the right decisions and say the right things, each time gaining more credibility and greater access to important people; in this, his character is reminiscent of Kosinski's Chauncey Gardiner in BEING THERE. Along the way, Dan Dong meets the renowned artist and fellow landsman Ocean Chen, the ruthlessly ambitious reporter Happy Gao, a foot massaging prostitute named Old Ten, and a small collection of oppressed individuals and rapacious businessmen who each want Dan to write news stories that will help them. Even as Dan practices his own form of banquet crashing deceit, he sees that those he meets simply want to use him for their own ends. In Ms. Yan's China, nearly everyone is both a user and a prostitute, living without principles and selling themselves for whatever gain it affords them. Truth is utterly relative, a product of each individual's particular motivations and objectives, further perverted by State censorship and editors' fears of government sanction.

As Dan becomes increasingly worldly from his journalistic experiences, his moral decline is contrasted with that of his oddly childlike wife, Little Plum. Throughout the book, Little Plum offers an almost saintly presence - uneducated, unassuming, undemanding, forbearing, and unwaveringly persevering. When confronted, she demonstrates flashes of anger and instinctive peasant savvy, but otherwise, she seems so devoid of affect and oblivious to her husband's unfaithfulness as to be almost robotic. In the end, however, it is Little Plum to whom Dan Dong will ultimately return after his two years' exposure to the workings of modern Chinese society - the unjust factory manager who has just upgraded to a Lexus even as he claims he is unable to pay his workers, the sleazy property developer Mr. Wu, the suffering peasants looking for justice in the capital city, even the self-serving guards at a car dealership who threaten to rape Little Plum.

Yan Geling's story is filled with trenchant observations about modern Chinese life, presented in a low key, satirical voice. Whether she is riffing on China's penchant for abstruse statistics and its materialistic perceptions about art (Happy Gao chooses as a gift from Ocean Chen one of his largest paintings based on her computations of the market value per square inch of the master's work), spoofing a saleslady's real estate pitch for an as yet unbuilt complex ("She is like an instructor of Marxism, teaching beautiful ideas of communism, helping you see things far beyond the way they appear now, so you can enjoy them in advance while they are still beautiful ideas."), or simply remarking the moral emptiness of modern Chinese life (Just tell him there's no right or wrong in China; it all depends on who you know."), Ms. Yan is an entertaining and spot-on observer. She wraps her commentary in a creative and engaging story line filled with memorable characters. The end result is a delightful read as well as education in the manners and mores of the "new China" - I heartily recommend THE BANQUET BUG to those interested in China and anyone who enjoys a well-told tale from a different culture. I recommend as well Ms. Yan's earlier novel, THE LOST DAUGHTER OF HAPPINESS, a stunning book that made me an instant fan.
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Picaresque Novel of Today's China, March 2, 2006
By 
L. A. Walker (Abuja, Nigeria (currently)) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Banquet Bug (Hardcover)
I probably should not be rating this novel, as I am the author's husband and therefore profoundly biased. But at this writing I am one of the few people to have read (and edited) the novel, and I would like to share its content with you to help you determine if this novel is for you.

The Banquet Bug is the first novel by Chinese novelist Geling Yan written directly in English. It deals with the phenomenon of the "banquet bug": people in today's China on the fringes of society who masquerade as journalists in order to take part in the many banquets -- and jouralistic payoffs -- that are a feature publicity events and product launches in most major cities of China today. The protagonist, Dan Dong, is an ingenue from a remote rural area of China now living in Beijing, and he falls into the banquet bug lifestyle after being laid off from his factory job. Along the way, he meets a variety of characters: a pushy, hardboiled female journalist who won't leave him alone; a temperamental, emotional abstract artist and his gold-digger fiancee; a foot-massage girl whose sister has suffered a terrible injustice; a well-spoken dwarf and fellow "journalist" who may be a real journalist, a fellow banquet bug or a police spy; a real estate mogul who styles himself as a provider of attractive, affordable housing while cheating home buyers and construction workers; a family of peasant farmers who have suffered terrible grievances at the hands of village officials; and the corrupt, indifferent son of a high Central Government official who can move heaven and earth with a call to his father, if he cares to do so. Dan comes face to face with the contradictions of China today, particularly opulence and excess of the cities versus the oppression and grinding poverty of the rural areas. Dan soon feels that everyone wants a piece of him ... and then he begins to suspect that someone is watching him.

This book is poignant social satire and a picaresque novel in the best tradition of Saul Bellow. It is a lively, enjoyable read, and I hope you'll enjoy it as much as I did.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Mother's Call!, October 21, 2007
By 
Cathy Edgett (Mill Valley, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Banquet Bug (Paperback)
I stumbled on The Banquet Bug by Geling Yan in my "local independent book store." I just spent two weeks in Hong Kong and two days in Macau, so I am fascinated with anything Chinese right now. I want to better understand this vast culture and how it currently manifests.

I just finished reading the book and I am stung by the hugeness of what Geling Yan reports, of the layers and complexity she exposes, in a book presented as a "comedy" and "entertaining." This book is a brutal commentary on life not only in China but in the United States. What is presented here could be written anywhere that the disparity between rich and poor continues to stretch, anywhere where the politicians and builders are corrupt, anywhere where some people have to sell their own blood to live.

This book ends with strong, gentle acclaim for Motherhood, for Little Plum, in her outspoken wisdom, nonjudgment, and innocence. The last word, "Good" is a knife to the soul. Has he compromised his principles, or does he continue to know that what matters can never be bartered, purchased, or sold?
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
banquet hug, shark fin banquet, nudity banquet, peacock banquet, banquet bugs, pigeon tongues, crystal mud, girl painter, eating banquets, reserve workers, fifty yuan, undercover policeman, jade ring, hundred yuan
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Little Plum, Ocean Chen, Old Ten, Uncle Bai, Master Chen, Dan Dong, Steel Bai, Happy Gao, Miss Wang, Uncle Liu, Director Yang, Summer Dream, Manager Zhu, Bai Village, President Wu, Deep Gao, Green Grove Club, Shopping Guide Weekly, Pink Chamber, Snow Dove Chen, Chairman Mao, After Dan, Chief Editor Lee, Capital Hospital, Film Bureau
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