Chinese Literature at the Literatures and Languages Library 

 
The UIUC Library houses a rich collection of Chinese literature in the vernacular and in English translation. This spring we are featuring a pop-up display of titles curated by Dr. Bing Wang, our new Chinese Studies Librarian, which is located at the entrance to the Reading Room (room 200) in the Main Library. Click here for more information and resources about Chinese Studies at the UIUC Library.

To pique your interest in these books, Dr. Wang offers a summary of one of her favorites: Confucian Analects on Skin (人皮论语 /Ren pi lun yu) by Wenbiao Ye.

The term “canon” originates from the Greek word denoting principles, norms, standards, and measures. For ordinary individuals, canons represent the unwavering tenets that demand rigorous adherence as the embodiment of truth. But, what about in the event that canons are deliberately distorted and manipulated by authorities for their own vested interests? What might be the costs if individuals opt to advocate the truth? 

The book Confucian Analects on Skin《人皮论语》is a captivating historical mystery fiction that delves into the struggles and conflicts faced by ordinary individuals in their quest to unveil the authentic canon, which stands in opposition to the manipulated version imposed by imperial authorities. Authored by Wenbiao Ye 冶文彪, a renowned contemporary Chinese writer specializing in fictional historical mysteries, this narrative revolves around the ​Analects (the Sayings of Confucius), which have long been revered as the cornerstone of Confucianism. Set against the historical backdrop of ancient China during the Han dynasty (202 B.C.–220 A.D.), this book unveils a mysterious manuscript inscribed on human skin that appears in the nation’s capital. The text displays variations from the officially endorsed and widely accepted version of the Analects; however, these words engraved on human skin adhere to the authentic original but are now known solely by one person. How will individuals respond to these divergent interpretations of the canon? Will they be willing to unearth the truth regardless of potential repercussions, even at the cost of sacrificing their own lives and those around them? Alternatively, might people choose self-silencing in exchange for personal and national interests? Amidst ideals, realities, loyalties, and tranquility, which aspirations will prevail among individuals?

–Dr. Bing Wang, Chinese Studies Librarian

Other works by Wenbiao Ye include The Pupil of Trust and the historical suspense series Qingming Shanghe Tu Mima (The Code of “Along the River During the Qingming Festival”), which was inspired by a famous handscroll painting attributed to Song dynasty artist Zhang Zeduan.  

More Chinese-language fiction and poetry recommendations from Dr. Wang are available to check out now! English translations of some titles are also available.

Shi jian yi min = Time immigrant 时间移民 
Cixin Liu (1969- ). Liu is probably the Chinese science fiction writer most familiar to Western readers due to American SFF author Ken Liu’s translations of his work. Best known for The Three-Body Problem; other works recently translated into English include Ball Lightning and Supernova Era. Liu is the winner of the 2015 Hugo Award, the 2017 Locus Award, and nine-time winner of the Galaxy Award.  

Long yu di xia tie = 龙与地下铁 
Boyong Ma (1980- ). Ma is a prolific novelist, columnist, and blogger; winner of the 2010 People’s Literature Prize. His short story “The City of Silence” was translated into English by American SFF author Ken Liu.  

Ma, qin yi xia = 媽, 親一下 
Jiubadao (pseudonym of Giddens Ko, 1978- ). Taiwanese novelist, screenwriter, and director. Best known for adapting and directing You Are the Apple of My Eye (2011) (based on his novel 那些年, 我們一起追的女孩) and most recently Miss Shampoo (2023) (based on his novel 精準的失控).  

Tian ji = 天机 
Series 1: PL2833.7.A386 T53 
Series 2: PL2833.7.A386 T532 
Jun Cai (1978- ). Cai is a popular writer of horror/suspense novels; winner of the Sina Literary Award. Other notable works include “The Child’s Past Life” (生死河, Sheng Si He) and “19th Floor of Hell” (地狱的第19层, Di Yu De Di Shi Jiu Ceng). Tian Ji was adapted as a movie in 2016.  

Shanhe shengyan = 山河盛宴  
Tian Xia Gui Yuan (pseudonym). Her novels Empress Fu Yao and Huang Quan have been adapted into television dramas (The Legend of Fu Yao and The Rise of Phoenixes). 

Nan da = 男妲 
Yingshu Cheng
(1968- ). Other works in our collection: Wo Zeng Shi Liu Wang Xue Sheng and Nü Liu Zhi Bei.  

Si wang zhi shu = 死亡之书 
Ximin Li (1966- ). A popular mystery/suspense writer. We also have the Tang Town trilogy (Book 1, Book 2, Book 3).  

Xiong di = Brothers 兄弟 
English translation here.
Hua Yu (1960- ). A former dentist, Yu turned to a literary career in the 1980s and is today one of China’s most important writers of avant-garde fiction. His works have received many domestic and international awards, including the James Joyce Award (2002). Brothers won the Prix Courrier International, the Yasnaya Polyana Literary Award, and was shortlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize. Several of Yu’s works have been adapted for television and film, most recently Chronicles of a Blood Merchant (as a Korean television drama) and Mistakes by the River (as a film titled Only the River Knows) in 2023.  

Qi men zhi Fengming Shan = 旗门之凤鸣山 
Tianwang90 (pseudonym)

Nie zi = 孽子  (vol. 3 of Bai Xianyong zuo pin ji
Hsien-yung Pai (also written as Bai Xianyong, 1937- ). Pai is an influential modernist writer; during his student days at National Taiwan University, Pai co-founded the literary journal Xiandai Wenshue (Modern Literature). He earned an M.A. from the University of Iowa and is a professor emeritus of Chinese literature at UC Santa Barbara. Nie zi is a novel included in a multivolume collection of his works. 

Hong fu ye ben = 红拂夜奔  
Xiaobo Wang (1952-1997). Wang’s career was brief, but his writing—especially his essays—experienced a surge in popularity and influence after his death. Much of his fiction deals with Chinese history, including his best-known novel, Golden Age. We have an extensive collection of his writings!  

Wa = 蛙 
English translation here.
Yan Mo (1955- ). Mo is the winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize for Literature and numerous other international and domestic awards. Best known in the West for Red Sorghum. We have many of his works, both in Chinese and in English translation. 

Mi yu zhe = 密語者 
English translation here.
Geling Yan (1958- ). A novelist and screenwriter who writes in both Chinese and English. We have many of her works written in Chinese, English, and several in English translation. Several of her works have been adapted as films. 

Qing hu = 青狐 
Meng Wang (1934- ). Novelist and essayist; Wang served as China’s Minister of Culture 1986-1989. He was awarded the Mao Dun Literature Prize in 2015 for The Scenery Here, a previously unpublished novel written in the 1970s during his time as an imprisoned laborer in Xinjiang 

Bian xing = 变形 
Duo Na (1977- ). Na is a prolific writer of supernatural/science fiction/suspense novels. A Chinese television adaptation of his novel 十九年间谋杀小叙 (No One Innocent in 19 Years Crime) has been announced but not yet scheduled.  

Di Renjie zhi tong tian an = 狄仁杰之通天案 
Anna Fangfang (pseudonym). A new take on the popular fictional/historical figure Di Renjie (Judge Dee), a Tang dynasty magistrate who investigates and solves cases. 

Xiang si shu xia = 相思树下 
Guanzhong Yu (1928-2017). Yu was a Taiwanese poet who graduated from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and was part of the modernist circle that included Pai Hsien-yung. Best known for his poem “Nostalgia,” he was a prolific poet and essayist, taught Chinese and English literatures, spoke several Western languages, and published Chinese translations of Western literary works.  

Lai ri fang chang : shi hua ji = 來日方長 : 詩畫集  
Xun Jiang (1947- ). Jiang is a well-known Taiwanese artist, art historian, public intellectual, and writer.  

Feng guo wan cheng = 风过晚城 
Wancheng Geng

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Roses & Thorns: New Romance

Written by Fiona Hartley-Kroeger, GA

Romance novels have changed a lot since Janice Radway’s landmark scholarly work, Reading the Romance, first published in 1984. For one thing, they’re not just about straight white women finding fulfilment under the patriarchy. (That’s never been all that romance novels have been about.) In their exploration of many kinds of love between many kinds of people, today’s romance novels create precisely what Radway hoped for: “a place and a vocabulary with which to carry on a conversation about the meaning of…personal relations and the seemingly endless renewal of their primacy” (18). Romance is a beautiful, varied bouquet.

As the recent “romantasy” trend demonstrates, romantic plotlines and relationships are frequently central to works in other genres. Romance elements can be integral to works of literary fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery, horror, and much more.

In celebration of this versatile, ever-evolving genre, here are some recent favorites:

ROSES
These novels participate in the genres of contemporary and historical romance, with strong attention to diversity and thoughtful reflection on how they distinguish themselves from their more homogenous predecessors. HEA (Happily Ever After), of course, guaranteed!

book coverAshley Herring Blake, Delilah Green Doesn’t Care

Suuuuuuure she doesn’t. Photographer Delilah Green is on the cusp of making it in New York City, with a string of pleasant one-night stands and an invitation to participate in a gallery show. Unfortunately, she’s also agreed to photograph her stepsister’s wedding in small-town Oregon. A reluctant trip to her childhood hometown unearths a wealth of complicated relationships and family hurt, but also brings the possibility of new beginnings.

 

Alyssa Cole, A Princess in Theory
Struggling epidemiology grad student Naledi is pretty sure the emails she keeps getting are unusually persistent scams. After all, what are the odds that she’s actually the long-lost betrothed of Prince Thabiso? When Thabiso shows up in New York and in her life, though, things get interesting. As a Black woman in STEM trying to get through grad school and pay off her student loans, Naledi is an instantly sympathetic heroine; the realities of her chosen path initially clash with Thabiso’s over-privileged lifestyle in a way that’s both serious and funny. His journey toward understanding her is by turns humorous and touching, and the whole thing is incredibly fun with, of course, a sweet, solid emotional core.

Sonali Dev, Recipe for Persuasion
Jane Austen meets cooking competition (Dancing with the Stars-syle) in this second entry in Sonali Dev’s series about an overachieving Indian family living in California. (Don’t worry if you haven’t read the first book, Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors, though you should give that a try too!) In a twist on my favorite Jane Austen novel, Persuasion, chef Ashna Raje and her former first love, soccer star Rico Silva, are paired on a high-stakes cooking competition. Their dynamic is as delicious as the food they prepare while utterly failing to resist their feelings. This is a wonderfully flavorful novel about first love, second chances, complicated families, and—inevitably—cooking puns.

Alexis Hall, A Lady for a Duke
The traditional concerns of the classic Regency romance novel—personal autonomy, gendered social roles, issues of class, childhood trauma, and transformation through love—provide an ideal framework for a story about a trans heroine and her childhood best friend. Viola Carroll, presumed dead on the battlefield in France, has sacrificed a great deal to become her true self. Her childhood best friend, Gracewood, never recovered from her death. When they meet again, they both have a LOT of baggage to work through—but they do so thoughtfully and oh-so-tenderly, with a few (minimal) misunderstandings and a really lovely mood of trans affirmation throughout.

Courtney Milan, The Duke Who Didn’t
You’ll fall in love with the entire village of Wedgeford, something of a haven for members of the Chinese diaspora in rural Victorian England. In this series-starter, longtime villager Chloe Fong and half-Chinese, half-English nobleman Jeremy Wentworth navigate their feelings amid quaint village shenanigans. Chloe is Organized! Her prized possession is a clipboard! She WILL make a commercial success of her father’s new culinary concoction, a sauce of supreme savor! Jeremy is more complex than his jokester persona would have you think, but he’s genuinely a sunshiny, sweet man who maaaayyy have forgotten to mention one tiny detail about his identity. Oops? They’re adorable.

Cat Sebastian, The Queer Principles of Kit Webb & The Perfect Crimes of Marian Hayes
Cat Sebastian brings Georgian England to queer romance! Enter a world of highwaymen, coffee houses, and incredible fashion. The first book features a banter-filled romance between ex-highwayman Kit Webb and nobleman Percy, Lord Holland; the second stars Percy’s best friend/stepmother/bi icon Marian Hayes and idealistic Rob Brooks, Kit’s former partner in (literal) crime. Cuteness! Crimes! Coffee!

Further Rosy Reading:
Jane Austen, Persuasion
K.J. Charles, The Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen & A Nobleman’s Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel
Emily Henry, Book Lovers
Georgette Heyer, Lady of Quality

 

THORNS
Here, the HEA is…less guaranteed. These novels hail from a variety of other genres and draw on romance tropes, comment on romantic fiction expectations, or focus less on the HEA than on the sometimes painful process of navigating feelings and relationships (or, you know, saving the world).

Akwaeke Emezi, You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty

The line between genre and literary fiction is frequently a thin one, revealing more about publishing norms and audience expectations (or prejudices) than about a work’s narrative, stylistic, or thematic content. In this novel, published as literary fiction, sex and grief collide as Feyi fights a messy, utterly necessary battle to recover from a shocking loss and rediscover love.

 

 

Intisar Khanani, Thorn

This is a lovely, fleshed-out retelling of the Brothers Grimm tale “The Goose Girl.” The unpleasant bits (identity theft, talking severed horse heads) are thoughtfully elaborated, and what begins as a tale of escaping abuse and betrayal gradually develops into a heart-tugging love story.

 

 

 

T. Kingfisher, Nettle & Bone

This is not a novel where the princess marries the prince and lives happily ever after. Actually, the prince murders one sister, abuses another, and deserves what’s coming to him when Princess Marra decides to take him down. There IS a cute romance, though, amid Marra’s efforts to complete impossible tasks, gather allies, and figure out how to murder the man she’s next in line to marry. (Maybe two cute romances, if you squint.) This is a perfectly dark fairy tale with all the unpleasant sorcery and underground tomb mazes you could wish for.

 

Tamsyn Muir, Gideon the Ninth

“Lesbian necromancers in space” isn’t INACCURATE, per se, but that description doesn’t do justice to Muir’s tangled web of love, grief, mental instability, and space palaces. The necromantic lesbians are cute, sure (by some definitions), but there’s a whole buffet of other relationships running the gamut from the wholesome to the wildly disturbing, and they’re all DELICIOUS.

 

 

 

Emily Tesh, Silver in the Wood & Drowned Country (coming soon!)
If sheer sweetness was the only criterion, these two novellas could go under Roses, but the HEA is by no means guaranteed. Tobias, the Wild Man of Greenhollow, and Henry Silver, newly arrived owner of Greenhollow Manor, undergo horror-filled trials of the heart to be together—only to undergo an acrimonious breakup that precipitates the second volume. Twining around their relationship are wonderful elements of English fairy lore; this is a great choice for fans of Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell who would prefer something a little shorter.  

 

Mo Xiang Tong Xiu, Heaven Official’s Blessing: Tian Guan Ci Fu (coming soon!)

An exemplar of the Chinese danmei (boys’ love) genre by the author of The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation: Mo Dao Zu Shi (the novel on which the 2019 drama The Untamed is based). The romance between a god and a ghost is incredibly sweet; it’s everything else that’s thorny! The epic tale spans 800 years, three realms, an extensive, memorable cast, martial arts, and a love story of unmatched devotion. This is the officially licensed English translation. Coming soon!

 

Further Thorny Reading:
Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights
Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber
Freya Marske, A Marvellous Light & A Restless Truth (A Power Unbound coming soon!)
Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Gods of Jade & Shadow

Did you know? We also have a selection of romance on audiobook!

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