'Yan Lianke is one of the best contemporary Chinese writers.' * Independent *
'A weirdly intoxicating book that moves from passages of stark realism to the most vivid sort of nightmare fantasy...A rather sentimental parable, a tale of suffering and sacrifice, a celebration of companionship and peasant ingenuity.'
* Saturday Paper *
'A master of imaginative satire. His work is animated by an affectionate loyalty to his peasant origins in the poverty-stricken province of Henan, and fierce anger over the political abuses of the regime.' * Guardian *
'One of China's eminent and most controversial novelists and satirists.' * Chicago Tribune *
'Yan Lianke well deserves to be in the Pantheon of great writers. He has no equal at attacking societal issues or the great Maoist myths in order to turn them into novels so breathtakingly powerful, shot through with black, often desperate, humor.' * Le Monde Diplomatique *
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'A moving fable about the love between an old man and his blind dog trying to survive.'
* Mindfood *
'Yan Lianke creates imaginary wounds in real blood...His books read like the brutal folklore history couldn't bear to remember, and his characters feel stranded, forgotten by time...like Beckett's most memorable characters...Desolation has rarely seemed so sensual, so insistently alive...Yan's vulgarity is the flip side of his sensuality, and recalls Upton Sinclair's line about aiming for his readers' hearts and hitting them in the stomach.' * New York Times Book Review *
'A pair of shape-shifting novellas...finds the Chinese master at the top of his game...Witty, sardonic, and full of rich irony...Lianke's pair of works, while set in rural China, offer a golden opportunity to reflect on our own fraught times. His satirical eye and generous heart are finely rendered in Carlos Rojas' superb translation. These are tales to savour.' * Toronto Star *
'Emotionally loaded stories...It's hard not to be moved by the running theme of self-sacrifice...[The Years, Months, Days] pays homage to the fated generation upon whose flesh and bones modern China was built.' * Wall Street Journal *
'The predicament it depicts is so harrowing, yet its treatment so stark and stately with a luminous beauty that makes it unearthly, that it retains a tragicomic quality that affirms the nature of art as an intimation of truth...What a hopeful book Yan Lianke has made out of the very essence of hopelessness. What a cry for life and human dignity.' -- Peter Craven * Sydney Morning Herald *
'An accessible and fascinating introduction to the work of this novelist, The Years, Months, Days is a moving fable deserving of a wide readership.' * Irish Times *
'It is dark, yes, but there is also something sly and funny in it. It reads like a wink. It feels like a tale being told, like a fable...[Lianke's] writing, wonderfully translated from the Chinese by Carlos Rojas, feels like a very old, very magical folktale being passed on to you.' * Literary Hub *