Ophelia Field
After Tiananmen
Kinder Than Solitude
By Yiyun Li
Fourth Estate 320pp £16.99
Yiyun Li’s second novel wears its complexity lightly. It shifts between three bright teenagers, a boy and two girls, living in Beijing shortly after the Tiananmen Square massacre, and their stories some twenty years later, after the two women have emigrated to the United States, leaving their friend, Boyang, to become a successful businessman in China. The whodunnit aspect – who poisoned a fourth young woman and why – successfully counterbalances Kinder Than Solitude’s otherwise essayistic tendencies. Li’s writing still shows influence, in other words, of her time at both the University of Iowa’s Nonfiction Writing Program and its Writers’ Workshop for fiction.
It is unusual for a novel to have several main characters essentially sharing the same neuroses, yet this never feels like a weakness. Instead, these shared traits – their studied passive aggression, their ‘skill of self-protection’ through isolation and their ‘compulsive purging of the past’ – operate symbolically on another
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Russia’s recent efforts to destabilise the Baltic states have increased enthusiasm for the EU in these places. With Euroscepticism growing in countries like France and Germany, @owenmatth wonders whether Europe’s salvation will come from its periphery.
Owen Matthews - Sea of Troubles
Owen Matthews: Sea of Troubles - Baltic: The Future of Europe by Oliver Moody
literaryreview.co.uk
Many laptop workers will find Vincenzo Latronico’s PERFECTION sends shivers of uncomfortable recognition down their spine. I wrote about why for @Lit_Review
https://literaryreview.co.uk/hashtag-living
An insightful review by @DanielB89913888 of In Covid’s Wake (Macedo & Lee, @PrincetonUPress).
Paraphrasing: left-leaning authors critique the Covid response using right-wing arguments. A fascinating read.
via @Lit_Review