英媒評亞洲十大小說 《紅樓夢》摘桂冠
英國《每日電訊報》(The Telegraph)日前刊出〈史上最好的十本亞洲小說〉一文,中國經典小說《紅樓夢》榮登榜首,但中國文學在榜單中只佔了一席之地,日本則有芥川
.....來看看十大小說有哪些?詳請點閱→http://bit.ly/QKktZg
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英國《每日電訊報》(The...
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10 best Asian novels of all time
Asian literature offers some of the most beautiful prose ever written. We pick the classics all books fans should read
Cao Xueqin (printed 1791)
With a cast of more than 400 characters, this episodic novel written in the
vernacular rather than classical Chinese tells of two branches of an
aristocratic family with a tragic love story at its humane heart. Chairman
Mao admired its critique of feudal corruption.
.
A
Fine Balance
Rohinton Mistry (1995)
Set during the Emergency of 1970 (a period marked by political unrest, torture and detentions), Mistry is critical of then-prime minister Indira Gandhi, although she is never named. Four characters from very different backgrounds are brought together by rapid social changes.
Rashomon
Ryunosuke Akutagawa (1915)
The author of more than 150 modernist short stories, but no full-length novels, Ryunosuke published Rashomon in a university magazine when he was just 17. Just 13 pages long, it comprises seven statements regarding the murder of a Samurai and his wife’s disappearance.
The Thousand Nights and One Night
Anonymous (First published in English 1706)
Wiley Scheherazade diverts the sultan from her execution with the poetic and riddlesome adventures of Aladdin, Ali Baba, Sinbad and mystical creatures. Packing in crime, horror, fantasy and romance, it influenced authors as diverse as Tolstoy, Dumas, Rushdie, Conan Doyle, Proust and Lovecraft.
Heat and Dust
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (1975)
In this compellingmnovel by the only person to have won both the Booker Prize and an Oscar, a woman travels to India to learn the truth about her step-grandmother and her life under the British Raj of the 1920s.
All About H Hatterr
G V Desani (1948)
It’s the glorious mash-up of English and Indian colloquialism that makes this book, about the son of a European merchant and a Malayan lady, such a wild, whimsical delight. Anthony Burgess admired its “creative chaos that grumbles at the restraining banks”.
The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
Haruki Murakami (1994)
This labyrinthine and hallucinogenic novel gets going when Toru Okada’s cat disappears in suburban Tokyo. He consults a pair of psychic sisters who appear to him in dreams and reality. But although Murakami’s plot meanders, it never loses its pace or its humanity.
Spring Snow
Yukio Mishima (1969-71)
Before committing ritual suicide in November 1970, Mishima posted this tetralogy of novels (named after a dry lunar plain once believed awash with water) to his publisher. It’s a saga of 20th-century Japan, in which a law student imagines a school friend constantly reincarnated.
Midnight's Children
Salman Rushdie (1980)
Magic realism meets postcolonial India in the ambitious, colourful and clever novel which was awarded the “Booker of Bookers” Prize. Hero Saleem Sinai is born at the stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947: the second of India’s independence and is endowed with an extraordinary talent.
The God of Small Things
Arundhati Roy (1997)
This intense and exquisitely written tale of fraternal twins unfolds against a backdrop of communism, the caste system, and Christianity in Kerala from the Sixties to the Nineties. “Change is one thing,” writes Roy in her Booker Prize-winning debut, “Acceptance is another”.
THE OTHER CONTENDERS
The Home and the World
Rabindranath Tagore (1916)
Diary of a Madman
Lu Xun (1918)
An Insular Possession
Timothy Mo (1986)
The Holder of the World
Bharati Mukherjee (1993)
A Suitable Boy
Vikram Seth (1993)
GALLERY: Writers who are football fans
Rohinton Mistry (1995)
Set during the Emergency of 1970 (a period marked by political unrest, torture and detentions), Mistry is critical of then-prime minister Indira Gandhi, although she is never named. Four characters from very different backgrounds are brought together by rapid social changes.
Rashomon
Ryunosuke Akutagawa (1915)
The author of more than 150 modernist short stories, but no full-length novels, Ryunosuke published Rashomon in a university magazine when he was just 17. Just 13 pages long, it comprises seven statements regarding the murder of a Samurai and his wife’s disappearance.
The Thousand Nights and One Night
Anonymous (First published in English 1706)
Wiley Scheherazade diverts the sultan from her execution with the poetic and riddlesome adventures of Aladdin, Ali Baba, Sinbad and mystical creatures. Packing in crime, horror, fantasy and romance, it influenced authors as diverse as Tolstoy, Dumas, Rushdie, Conan Doyle, Proust and Lovecraft.
Heat and Dust
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (1975)
In this compellingmnovel by the only person to have won both the Booker Prize and an Oscar, a woman travels to India to learn the truth about her step-grandmother and her life under the British Raj of the 1920s.
All About H Hatterr
G V Desani (1948)
It’s the glorious mash-up of English and Indian colloquialism that makes this book, about the son of a European merchant and a Malayan lady, such a wild, whimsical delight. Anthony Burgess admired its “creative chaos that grumbles at the restraining banks”.
The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
Haruki Murakami (1994)
This labyrinthine and hallucinogenic novel gets going when Toru Okada’s cat disappears in suburban Tokyo. He consults a pair of psychic sisters who appear to him in dreams and reality. But although Murakami’s plot meanders, it never loses its pace or its humanity.
Spring Snow
Yukio Mishima (1969-71)
Before committing ritual suicide in November 1970, Mishima posted this tetralogy of novels (named after a dry lunar plain once believed awash with water) to his publisher. It’s a saga of 20th-century Japan, in which a law student imagines a school friend constantly reincarnated.
Midnight's Children
Salman Rushdie (1980)
Magic realism meets postcolonial India in the ambitious, colourful and clever novel which was awarded the “Booker of Bookers” Prize. Hero Saleem Sinai is born at the stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947: the second of India’s independence and is endowed with an extraordinary talent.
The God of Small Things
Arundhati Roy (1997)
This intense and exquisitely written tale of fraternal twins unfolds against a backdrop of communism, the caste system, and Christianity in Kerala from the Sixties to the Nineties. “Change is one thing,” writes Roy in her Booker Prize-winning debut, “Acceptance is another”.
THE OTHER CONTENDERS
The Home and the World
Rabindranath Tagore (1916)
Diary of a Madman
Lu Xun (1918)
An Insular Possession
Timothy Mo (1986)
The Holder of the World
Bharati Mukherjee (1993)
A Suitable Boy
Vikram Seth (1993)
GALLERY: Writers who are football fans