Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

A Free Life

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Meet the Wu family—father Nan, mother Pingping, and son Taotao. They are arranging to fully sever ties with China in the aftermath of the 1989 massacre at Tiananmen Square, and to begin a new, free life in the United States. At first, their future seems well-assured. But after the fallout from Tiananmen, Nan's disillusionment turns him toward his first love, poetry. Leaving his studies, he takes on a variety of menial jobs as Pingping works for a wealthy widow as a cook and housekeeper. As Pingping and Taotao slowly adjust to American life, Nan still feels a strange attachment to his homeland, though he violently disagrees with Communist policy. But severing all ties—including his love for a woman who rejected him in his youth—proves to be more difficult than he could have ever imagined.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Jason Ma brings a wonderfully enriching technique to his narration of Jin's engrossing novel about a Chinese immigrant family's adaptation to America in the late twentieth century. Ma's voicings of the couple, Nan and Pinping, as they speak English, become a metaphor for the experience of immigration--full of all the tentativeness, uncertainty, and lack of confidence that is the lot of all who labor through an alien culture. Gradually, as the Wus become more--but not fully--Americanized, Ma subtly accords them greater facility and assuredness. He proves himself a sensitive guide through a novel that addresses fascinating topics of identification--such a loyalty to country versus government and the existential role of an artist who has been rooted out of his native culture. M.O. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 23, 2007
      Ha Jin, who emigrated from China in the aftermath of Tiananmen Square, had only been writing in English for 12 years when he won the National Book Award for Waiting
      in 1999. His latest novel sheds light on an émigré writer’s woodshedding period. It follows the fortunes of Nan Wu, who drops out of a U.S. grad school after the repression of the democracy movement in China, hoping to find his voice as a poet while supporting his wife, Pingping, and son, Taotao. After several years of spartan living, Nan and Pingping save enough to buy a Chinese restaurant in suburban Atlanta, setting up double tensions: between Nan’s literary hopes and his career, and between Nan and Pingping, who, at the novel’s opening, are staying together for the sake of their young boy. While Pingping grows more independent, Nan—amid the dulling minutiae of running a restaurant and worries about mortgage payments, insurance and schooling—slowly snuffs the torch he carries for his first love. That Nan at one point reads Dr. Zhivago
      isn’t coincidental: while Ha Jin’s novel lacks Zhivago
      ’s epic grandeur, his biggest feat may be making the reader wonder whether the trivialities of American life are not, in some ways, as strange and barbaric as the upheavals of revolution.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading