Description
This powerful novel is largely set in the punitive labor camps to which Tibetans were sent after the failed rebellion, where many perished from starvation or forced labor. Inside and outside the camps, it depicts with dark humor a world of informers, cruelty, and score settling, against the backdrop of immeasurable environmental devastation and the destruction of traditional Tibetan ways of life. The novel draws on extensive interviews conducted by the author, and the rhythms of oral storytelling are reflected in its fragmented narrative style, which jumps back and forth between periods and events. An unparalleled account of the Chinese Communist Party's takeover of Tibet, The Red Wind Howls is both a richly imaginative work of fiction and a vital piece of historical testimony.
About the Author
Tsering Doendrup is one of modern Tibet's most celebrated writers. His fiction has been translated into numerous languages, and he is the recipient of several literary awards-though none domestically since the release of this novel, which brought him intense scrutiny from the Chinese state. The Red Wind Howls remains his only major work not published in China.
Christopher Peacock is assistant professor of East Asian studies at Dickinson College. Among his translations are Tsering Doendrup's The Handsome Monk and Other Stories (Columbia, 2019) and Tsering Yangkyi's Flowers of Lhasa (2022).
Reviews
Part Gulag Archipelago, part One Hundred Years of Solitude, The Red Wind Howls breaks the curse of erased memory imposed by the colonial powers. An urgent, tragic, and vital testimony for the Tibetan people. -- Woeser, author of Forbidden Memory: Tibet During the Cultural Revolution
Book Information
ISBN 9780231213721
Author Tsering Dondrup
Format Hardback
Page Count 392
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press