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The Fat Years: A Novel
 
 
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The Fat Years: A Novel [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Koonchung Chan (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 10, 2012
Banned in China, this controversial and politically charged novel tells the story of the search for an entire month erased from official Chinese history.
 
Beijing, sometime in the near future: a month has gone missing from official records. No one has any memory of it, and no one could care less—except for a small circle of friends, who will stop at nothing to get to the bottom of the sinister cheerfulness and amnesia that have possessed the Chinese nation. When they kidnap a high-ranking official and force him to reveal all, what they learn—not only about their leaders, but also about their own people—stuns them to the core. It is a message that will astound the world.

A kind of Brave New World reflecting the China of our times, The Fat Years is a complex novel of ideas that reveals all too chillingly the machinations of the postmodern totalitarian state, and sets in sharp relief the importance of remembering the past to protect the future.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Smart, incendiary . . . Although The Fat Years clearly owes a debt to Brave New World, Chan's characters are infinitely more believable, and drawn with a real sense of sympathy and understanding — something Huxley's archetypes famously lacked. As for plausibility, The Fat Years is almost too believable . . . An urgent clarion call for people in every country to treasure their individuality.”
—NPR

"Chan has crafted a cunning caricature of modern China, with its friction between communism and consumerism, its desire to reframe the Revolution in terms of 'market share and the next big thing.' But he has also identified a deeper dislocation, one stretching from China to the world."
Los Angeles Times

"With its offbeat puzzle and diverting characters, The Fat Years is not only absorbing in its own right, it also shines reflected light on the foibles of the West."
The New York Times Book Review

"Inventive and highly topical."
The Wall Street Journal

 "A fascinating tale of China just over the horizon."
 —The New Yorker

"Part political thriller, part dystopian nightmare . . . Chan reveals the moral and political perils of contemporary Chinese life."
Publishers Weekly

"Eerily prescient. . . A gripping, if not terrifying, treatise on the rise of China, present and future."
Toronto Star

"Possibly the most audacious book to have been published by a Chinese author not living in exile since Lu Xun excoriated the atrophied Confucianism of the early 20th century. . . . This novel isn’t only essential reading, it is also urgent."
The Globe and Mail

"In conjuring China’s very near future, Chan Koonchung has given us a bracingly honest portrait of the present. He captures all the flamboyant paradoxes of daily life in China on the cusp of empire, but is also awake to its submerged anxieties. His writing is steeped in humor and fantasy, but his project could not be more serious: The struggle over the soul of a nation."
—Evan Osnos, Beijing correspondent, The New Yorker

"What happens when 1.3 billion Chinese are all very happy? The Fat Years is suspenseful, hilarious, intelligent, and dark — a powerful novel. Anyone interested in learning about the current state and future of China should read this novel."
—Shu-mei Shih, University of California, Los Angeles

"It's no wonder that the insecure Chinese authorities have banned this book in China itself.  It tells stunning truths that those authorities strive hard to keep under the rug, and it tells them with a literary flair worthy of Orwell.  Chan Koonchung's novel is deeply disturbing, biting, weirdly funny, and, above, all, piercingly honest."
—Richard Bernstein, author of The Coming Conflict with China

"A thought-provoking novel about China's tomorrow, that reveals the truth about China today."
—Xinran, author of The Good Women of China
 
"With echoes of Kafka, Lu Xun and Orwell, The Fat Years limns a New China that few have imagined: a booming, post-revolutionary land where historical and political amnesia are rewarded by the right to wealth and a seductive but amputated ‘good life.’ More unsettling, Chan's novel suggests that the ‘China's model’ of high-speed growth may mean that, far from heading towards greater openness and democracy as we have long imagined, history may actually be headed towards a new kind of Leninist consumerism."
—Orville Schell, Director of the Center on US-China Relations at the Asia Society
 
"Rarely does a novel tell the truth about a society in a way that has the power to shift our perceptions about that place in a fundamental way, but Chan Koonchung’s The Fat Years does exactly that. A dystopic political fantasy, it provides a frighteningly accurate portrayal of a rising world superpower where few things are as they seem, and where critics who persist in speaking truth to power are ‘harmonized’ in the name of social stability and maintenance of Communist Party control. If you read only one book about China this year, make it this one — it tells you more about China than any work of non-fiction."
—Didi Kirsten Tatlow, China Columnist, International Herald Tribune and New York Times

"This dystopia masterfully captures the dilemma today's Chinese face: embrace economic growth or fight for justice. Chan delves into Beijing’s conscience and does not like what he sees." 
—Isaac Stone Fish, Reporter, Newsweek/Daily Beast

"Chan’s compelling dystopian fantasy reveals the underbelly of today’s Rising China while holding up a challenging mirror to fellow Chinese and all thoughtful readers."
 —Timothy Cheek, University of British Columbia, author of Living with Reform: China Since 1989

"The Fat Years is the best and most accessible account of the multiple faces of China’s public intellectuals and the complicated world of popular authoritarianism in which they live.  A distinctive form of whimsical realism that makes for compelling reading."
 —Paul Evans, Director of the Institute of Asian Research, University of British Columbia 

"Bracing, smart and entertaining."
Independent
 
"Hardly a thriller in the conventional sense of the word but a lot more scary than most."
The Times

"The Fat Years
presents a vivid, intelligent and disturbing picture of the world’s emerging super-power."
—The Spectator

About the Author

CHAN KOONCHUNG is a novelist, journalist, and screenwriter. Born in Shanghai and raised and educated in Hong Kong, he studied at the University of Hong Kong and Boston University. He has published more than a dozen Chinese-language books and in 1976 founded the monthly magazine City in Hong Kong, of which he was the chief editor and then publisher for twenty-three years. He has been a producer on more than thirteen films. Chan Koonchung now lives in Beijing.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Nan A. Talese (January 10, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385534345
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385534345
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #107,529 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
In the translator's note, The Fat Years is described as China's version of the Brave New World and he points out that Chinese intellectuals are telling him this novel captures their zeitgeist more than anything else.
As for the plot, a group of Chinese intellectuals slowly uncover a huge Chinese conspiracy, a period of 28 days in which the Chinese people forget everything during a violent government crackdown.

As a compelling narrative, the novel doesn't work so well because the plot is more of an outline to hang various "essays" spoken by the characters. Some of the principals will talk for pages and pages in what are lectures about the current condition of China. A lot of these spoken essays are quote-worthy, including a reference to Hobbes' Leviathan in which a "short, brutish" existence compels the masses to rely on a governmental patriarch to create an illusion of security and how this longing makes the people compromise their freedom. This is one of many "lectures" about soft power.

I can't emphasize this enough: This novel is full of exposition spoken by the characters. The exposition points out a robust critique of modern China: consumerism in these "fat" years has become a sort of religion and a distraction as the old-guard elite continue to amass power; China's economy continues to boom even while the rest of world languishes in a recession evidencing that China will replace America as the sole super power; the Chinese government effectively uses propaganda to create an illusion of freedom (soft power) even while it asserts military rule over the people; while there is a group of freedom-loving cosmopolitans fighting for a new China, the masses are still dependent on the old-guard government for their sense of security.

This novel works as a fascinating book of ideas and captures what is going on behind the scenes in China, but it works more as an exposition than as a narrative.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Having self interupted a Jane Austen reading spree I was in the midst of for this book it was a little difficult to get into this book with its very simplistic style but after a while I was able to adjust. Thankfully there will be no problems resuming my Austen reading spree.
This novel doesn't meet your typical expectations of a novel. The plot is simple, there is lots of buildup to great things but all the great things always fall flat with little or any attempts at drama. There is an quasi love story thats very unmoving in the middle of this that seems to have nothing really to do with anything. The background stories of all the characters while seeming important may as well have been mere page filler for all there use. Plus the author tries to be deeply philosphic but only ever achieves success when quoting better philosphers.
Yet I was unable to put this book down but for one reason. Reading was a great insight into the current Chinese state of mind...well a portion of China anyway. To imagine so amateur a novel ever being considered contreversial by western literary standards is absurd. Books about government conspiracies are almost as numerous as self help books. But that it could so rivet the attention of China and Taiwan made it fascinating for me.
Anyway this book is not bad and very engrossing if you enter with the correct expectations, those being to glimpse the mind set of the Chinese middle class.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Set 2 years in the future 2013, with China entering a Golden Age of Ascendancy and the West in economic decline, this book is nominally about the search for the cause of almost universal happiness and a month (in 2011) missing from collective memory. Koonchung Chan centers his book around a small number of individuals who do not share this happiness and still remember the month of near-anarchy followed by government crackdown. The mystery is why no one (besides this tiny minority) remembers, and why everyone else is always in such a good mood. This book has shades of Kafka, Orwell, and even Philip K. Dick. This book has banned in China because it revels in passed misdeeds of the Communist Party, and describing a autocratic ruling body that has lost its ideology, and uses a paternalistic rationale to govern and maintain order.
Rather than a coherent story, this book reads as almost a series of position papers about China, Culture, Consumerism and Communism, and as much a criticism of China today, as the direction that China is going. That being said, it is still a fascinating read.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Thought-provoking, intellectual literature
In translation theory, there are two main factions: the "naturalizers" and the "foreignizers" The naturalizers think that literature should be translated in a language that feels... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Anabelle Bernard Fournier
Plods Along For The Purpose of Making A Point
The plot is quite simple: China's government has convinced its people that the country is in a new Golden Age. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Katherine Berry
Interesting read
The Chinese government has problems dealing with anything that smacks of politics. I can understand why this would be banned. Read more
Published 3 months ago by WriterGirl
the banned book they actually want you to read
Does the Chinese Communist Party actually want you to read this book?

Of course, I don't know the answer to that question any more than you do. Read more
Published 3 months ago by DaLaoHu
Cool book.
I was surprised by this book. I am not really into Asian culture, maybe because it is hard to understand, so much history and totally different from Europe when I grew up and US... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Marley
very interesting, though English translation is clumsy
Disclaimer: I am reviewing an advance unproofread copy that I received for free through the Vine program.

I enjoyed this book a lot. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Christopher K. Koenigsberg
Very enjoyable...Utopian/Dystopian All at Once!
After hearing about this novel, I was thrilled to be able to receive an ARC for review. Without including any spoilers, suffice to say, this book is both a utopian and dystopian... Read more
Published 3 months ago by javajunki
How do you say "Matrix" in Chinese?
Americans who've been paying attention know that China is now the 800-pound gorilla in the room. Americans who make a point of looking forward are starting to worry that we're the... Read more
Published 4 months ago by ringo
Different but good
In reviewing this book, I found that at first I thought, oh boy, way over my head and thinking...but as I turned page after page, I found that my interest was peeking and wondering... Read more
Published 4 months ago by B. Rackley
A counterfeit paradise
"The Fat Years" is not a difficult novel to read but it is not intended to be light entertainment. It explores the conflicting social, political and economic forces that now... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Margaret Picky
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Introduction (From Wikipedia)

The Fat Years is a Chinese science-fiction novel written by Chan Koonchung (陳冠中). Banned in China, the book was published in Hong Kong, and later worldwide. It has been translated into English by Michael S. Duke and published by Transworld Publishers, London. The novel is set in the near future (2013), in a time of prosperity for China marred by hidden repression. The characters have collective anmesia and have forgotten an entire month.

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