Picture of author.

An Yu (1)

Author of Braised Pork

For other authors named An Yu, see the disambiguation page.

2 Works 264 Members 13 Reviews

Works by An Yu

Braised Pork (2020) 153 copies
Ghost Music (2022) 111 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Nationality
Chinese
Country (for map)
Hong Kong, China

Members

Reviews

Just finished [b:Braised Pork|45161754|Braised Pork|An Yu|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1566760950l/45161754._SY75_.jpg|69857295], a first novel by An Yu (who writes in English) about a lonely widowed artist living in Beijing who conducts a quest to Tibet seeking a dream image of a fish figure with the head of a man. She found a sketch of this creature next to the body of her late husband. Not my usual fare, the fantasy element, but the writing was superb, with enough realistic details of Jia Jia's life and existential concerns to keep the story moving along in its modern setting. I puzzled over the title, which finally appears in the denouement as a childhood favorite food her father serves, although what does it mean?

Conversation with her bartender lover: 'Do you ever feel that sometimes, when something happens to you," she said, her index finger tapping on the wine glass, 'something deep inside you changes? You can't undo it, and you wonder whether this is the person you want to be. So you just stay, contemplating whether you like your new self until something else happens to you and you start the process all over again. Ever feel that way? If I had met you before I married Chen Hang--'
… (more)
 
Flagged
featherbooks | 10 other reviews | May 7, 2024 |
A strangely unsettling book, one in which the narrator, Song Yan trades her budding career as a concert pianist - something her father had been grooming her for during her entire life - for being a stay-at-home-with-a little-piano-teaching-thrown-in wife. Her marriage is unsatisfactory: communication is not the couple's strong suit, and indeed everything that happens to Song Yan does indeed happen to her: any decisions she makes seem to be entirely spur-of-the-moment. She comes across as an entirely passive character and I have trouble identifying this book as feminist, as I have seen it described. The mushrooms which make an appearance in the book every now and then doubtless have significance, but exactly what eludes me. I've upgraded my score from 2 to 3 as I got to the end willingly enough - in a passive kind of way.… (more)
 
Flagged
Margaret09 | 1 other review | Apr 15, 2024 |
An Yu’s debut novel Braised Pork starts with the grotesque death of businessman Chen Hang in his Beijing apartment. His young wife Jia Jia discovers him drowned in a half-filled bath, face down and “his rump sticking out from the water”. Is it suicide or a freak accident? Jia Jia can’t really say, especially since the couple have long been drifting apart and Chen Hang rarely opened up to her. Jia Jia only has two clues to try to get to the heart of the mystery. One is the strange sketch of what she calls “the fish-man”, a fish with a human head, which she finds in the bathroom close to her husband’s lifeless body. Another is a related, unsettling dream which Chen Hang had whilst on a solitary trip to Tibet and which he had uncharacteristically phoned to tell her about.

Jia Jia’s marriage was built on convenience, not love. Yet this does not make it any easier for her to come to terms with her loss and with the upheaval – both practical and emotional – which her husband’s death brings. This unforeseen tragedy also triggers memories of older pains, including her parents’ separation and her mother’s death. Jia Jia believes that the solution of the “fish-man” enigma might give her the replies she craves, and she finally decides to get to the bottom of the mystery, by recreating Chen Hang’s trip to Tibet. It will become a voyage of (self-) discovery.

An Yu has given us a strange little novel which I’m not sure I managed to come to grips with. There is a strong element of magical realism, characterised by mythical figures (such as the “Grandpa” character Jia Jia meets in Tibet) and obscure dream sequences featuring a mysterious “water world”. Indeed, imagery relating to water permeates the whole novel – a Kindle search tells me that the word “water” is explicitly mentioned 107 times in the book. That, of course, does not include other more oblique allusions and images, including the aquarium bought by Jia Jia’s aunt, the description of the lakes and rivers of Tibet and the smog-tainted snow of Beijing, and even the unexpected mention of Maurice Ravel’s Jeux d’Eau in the final paragraphs of the novel. Jia herself is compared to water: Leo, the barman with whom she attempts a relationship, tells her she is “like water…your beauty is soft and quiet”.

The meaning behind these watery metaphors remains frustratingly elusive. Do they symbolise tears of grief? Is the dark “watery world” a symbol of depression? Few answers are given. And perhaps the author’s intention is precisely that. The magical elements add an aura of mystery and lyricism to what is, at heart, a touching portrayal of a young widow struggling to overcome her loss and make peace with her past.

Braised Pork is an unusual dish, and I’m not sure all its ingredients fit together. But despite my head-scratching, I certainly enjoyed reading it. Apparently, Harvill Secker bought 26-year old An Yu’s debut after a seven-way auction, and have committed to publishing her second novel. This author is going places.

(Full review at https://endsoftheword.blogspot.com/2019/11/braised-pork-an-yu-novel.html )
… (more)
 
Flagged
JosephCamilleri | 10 other reviews | Feb 21, 2023 |
An Yu’s debut novel Braised Pork starts with the grotesque death of businessman Chen Hang in his Beijing apartment. His young wife Jia Jia discovers him drowned in a half-filled bath, face down and “his rump sticking out from the water”. Is it suicide or a freak accident? Jia Jia can’t really say, especially since the couple have long been drifting apart and Chen Hang rarely opened up to her. Jia Jia only has two clues to try to get to the heart of the mystery. One is the strange sketch of what she calls “the fish-man”, a fish with a human head, which she finds in the bathroom close to her husband’s lifeless body. Another is a related, unsettling dream which Chen Hang had whilst on a solitary trip to Tibet and which he had uncharacteristically phoned to tell her about.

Jia Jia’s marriage was built on convenience, not love. Yet this does not make it any easier for her to come to terms with her loss and with the upheaval – both practical and emotional – which her husband’s death brings. This unforeseen tragedy also triggers memories of older pains, including her parents’ separation and her mother’s death. Jia Jia believes that the solution of the “fish-man” enigma might give her the replies she craves, and she finally decides to get to the bottom of the mystery, by recreating Chen Hang’s trip to Tibet. It will become a voyage of (self-) discovery.

An Yu has given us a strange little novel which I’m not sure I managed to come to grips with. There is a strong element of magical realism, characterised by mythical figures (such as the “Grandpa” character Jia Jia meets in Tibet) and obscure dream sequences featuring a mysterious “water world”. Indeed, imagery relating to water permeates the whole novel – a Kindle search tells me that the word “water” is explicitly mentioned 107 times in the book. That, of course, does not include other more oblique allusions and images, including the aquarium bought by Jia Jia’s aunt, the description of the lakes and rivers of Tibet and the smog-tainted snow of Beijing, and even the unexpected mention of Maurice Ravel’s Jeux d’Eau in the final paragraphs of the novel. Jia herself is compared to water: Leo, the barman with whom she attempts a relationship, tells her she is “like water…your beauty is soft and quiet”.

The meaning behind these watery metaphors remains frustratingly elusive. Do they symbolise tears of grief? Is the dark “watery world” a symbol of depression? Few answers are given. And perhaps the author’s intention is precisely that. The magical elements add an aura of mystery and lyricism to what is, at heart, a touching portrayal of a young widow struggling to overcome her loss and make peace with her past.

Braised Pork is an unusual dish, and I’m not sure all its ingredients fit together. But despite my head-scratching, I certainly enjoyed reading it. Apparently, Harvill Secker bought 26-year old An Yu’s debut after a seven-way auction, and have committed to publishing her second novel. This author is going places.

(Full review at https://endsoftheword.blogspot.com/2019/11/braised-pork-an-yu-novel.html )
… (more)
 
Flagged
JosephCamilleri | 10 other reviews | Jan 1, 2022 |

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Suzanne Dean Cover artist & designer, Cover designer

Statistics

Works
2
Members
264
Popularity
#87,286
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
13
ISBNs
26
Languages
2

Charts & Graphs