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Original Title: 上海宝贝 [Shanghai baobei]
ISBN: 1841196843 (ISBN13: 9781841196848)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Mark Fuller, Cocó, Tian Tian
Setting: Shanghai(China) China
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Shanghai Baby Mass Market Paperback | Pages: 311 pages
Rating: 3.21 | 4264 Users | 351 Reviews

Particularize Of Books Shanghai Baby

Title:Shanghai Baby
Author:Zhou Weihui
Book Format:Mass Market Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 311 pages
Published:2002 by Robinson (first published 1999)
Categories:Cultural. China. Fiction. Romance. Asia. Contemporary. Literature. Asian Literature

Explanation During Books Shanghai Baby

A story of love, sex and self-discovery - banned in China.

Publicly burned in China for its sensual nature and irreverent style, this novel is the semi-autobiographical story of Coco, a cafe waitress, who is full of enthusiasm and impatience for life. She meets a young man, Tian Tian, for whom she feels tenderness and love, but he is reclusive, impotent and an increasing user of drugs. Despite parental objections, Coco moves in with him, leaves her job and throws herself into her writing.

Shortly afterwards, she meets Mark, a married Westerner. The two are uncontrollably attracted and begin a highly charged, physical affair. Torn between her two lovers, and tormented by her deceit, her unfinished novel and the conflicting feelings involved in love and betrayal, Coco begins to find out who she really is.

Here is a beautifully written novel with a distinct voice that describes China on the brink of its own social and sexual revolution.

'I was looking for a voice of my generation. The gap that divides those of us born in the 1970s and the older generation has never seemed so wide.' - Wei Hui, Reuters

Rating Of Books Shanghai Baby
Ratings: 3.21 From 4264 Users | 351 Reviews

Critique Of Books Shanghai Baby
A lot of my Chinese friends encourage me to read this book, not because they think it's cool or that it's fantastic, but because the main character is a Shanghainese girl.Well, duh, you can read the title, right?It turned out, my Chinese friends - who are not from Shanghai - begged me to read this book to prove their points that Shanghai girls are *cough* a bit unruly on the sex and wild side. They have this prejudice that Shanghai girls are only after white guys and that they would do anything

I found this book on a sale and it kindled my interest because i had heard about the scandal and the banning it had been involved in in china - well, it's very explicit about sex, but doesn't break any real taboos in the western world. Ok, there's sex with an impotent man, there's sex with a German with an OOOOOOO SOOOOOOO HUUUUUUUUUGE penis, there's no sex with a vibrator and there's a little bit of flirting with other women. the only thing which really made me swallow (in an unpleasant way)

About the Book Wei Hui calls the novel a semi-autobiographical account of her spiritual and sexual awakening.semi-autobiographical (influenced by American writer Henry Miller), close resemblance to the authors life, but partially fiction to make it more entertaining or use it for ones conclusions, could not find out morebanned in China for its sexual content, its bold depiction of Chinas New Generation, especially that of womenswas a local bestseller, after the banishmentwhich is probably also

Loved it. Slutty and unapologetic the way I like it.

I bought this book because of the controversy and upon reading it I understand why this book caused such a stir in China that drove them to burn the copies. Personally I found the topic quite ordinary, drug addiction and female sexuality is something that an army of Indonesian young writers love to discuss since the fall of New Order era. But given the fact that this is a book from a young woman in a country as repressed as China, I gotta give it some credit. The author was very brave. She spoke

I grabbed this book off of a free book exchange shelf thinking it was Shanghai Girls but decided to read it anyway. Big mistake! Granted this book was written in 1999 and was almost banned by the Chinese government because of it's sensuality, it was not worth being printed. This was a very shallow twenty-something version of Sex in the City without the best friends. The only parts that were interesting were brief commentaries on western expats. I found the narrator obsessed with all things

Much of the praise this novel got is undeserved. Its raise to popularity has to do ( I strongly believe) mainly with the fact that it was banned by the Chinese government. I actually agree with what the Chinese government had to say about it, how it was an imitation of the west or something like that.The protagonist is this Shanghai girl nicknamed Coco whose idol is Coco Chanel. You could say that the two have something in common--- While Coco Chanel was famous for her relationship with a Nazi

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