Loud Sparrows: Contemporary Chinese Short-Shorts
by Howard Goldblatt (Editor), Julie Chiu (Editor), Aili Mu (Editor)
On This Page
Description
Extremely short stories-known as short-shorts-have become a global phenomenon, but nowhere have they been embraced as enthusiastically as in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. The form's artistic and aesthetic freedoms allow authors to capture the tone, texture, and chaos of their rapidly changing societies in infinitely inventive ways. Fragments and contingencies reveal unofficial histories, undocumented memories, and the trials of everyday individuals, and the genre's lean format is a show more welcome antidote to a culture characterized by rampant excess. Loud Sparrows is a spirited collection of ninety-one short-shorts written by Chinese authors over the past three decades. Presenting diverse voices and perspectives by writers both well known and new to the art, the stories are culled from newspapers, magazines, literary journals, and personal collections. Their subjects range from the mundane to the sublime and illuminate everything from humanist ideals to traditional virtues to the material benefits of a commercialized society. The anthology is organized into thematic categories such as Change, Creatures, (In)fidelities, Grooming, Governance, Nourishment, and Weirdness, and includes notes to better understand the genre. Each section is introduced by an original piece of flash fiction written by Howard Goldblatt. The short-short, to borrow a Chinese saying, is "small as a sparrow but has all the vital organs" of a good story. Loud Sparrows offers a comprehensive introduction to a unique literary genre that has revolutionized world literature. show lessTags
Member Reviews
An eclectic collection of stories, each under 1000 words: Loud Sparrows invites readers into Chinese lives with tales that feel as carefully selected and ordered as the well-chosen words that form them. Sometimes there’s a feeling that something was lost in translation, but for the most part, these stories recreate lives both familiar and strange, and situations that are frequently achingly real. Some tales are snippets, like seeds waiting to grow in the reader’s imagination. Others fit so much into their small frame you wonder what magic made it possible.
Each section starts with a very short, very gripping snippet –my favorite might be the choice of write-in candidates for election, which introduces the stories headed show more “Choices.” Section headings alone provide food for thought – “Controversy” leading to “Anticipation” to “Creatures” and more. And the story selection somehow makes the section transitions natural as well, no small achievement.
Short shorts are ideal for readers with short times to read. Make the coffee and meet a written stranger; catch a bus and smile at someone you’ll never see. Sometimes the tales keep you well in your own world of coffee and transport, and sometimes they transport you to another place of soldiers and bamboo poles. If one tale doesn’t grab you, it’s short enough to ignore. If another does, you’ll surely have to finish before putting down the book.
Fascinating, different, and an excellent read as this is: reader beware – reading one short short doesn’t take long. Reading a feast of them takes far longer than reading a novel.
Disclosure: I borrowed this from a friend. show less
Each section starts with a very short, very gripping snippet –my favorite might be the choice of write-in candidates for election, which introduces the stories headed show more “Choices.” Section headings alone provide food for thought – “Controversy” leading to “Anticipation” to “Creatures” and more. And the story selection somehow makes the section transitions natural as well, no small achievement.
Short shorts are ideal for readers with short times to read. Make the coffee and meet a written stranger; catch a bus and smile at someone you’ll never see. Sometimes the tales keep you well in your own world of coffee and transport, and sometimes they transport you to another place of soldiers and bamboo poles. If one tale doesn’t grab you, it’s short enough to ignore. If another does, you’ll surely have to finish before putting down the book.
Fascinating, different, and an excellent read as this is: reader beware – reading one short short doesn’t take long. Reading a feast of them takes far longer than reading a novel.
Disclosure: I borrowed this from a friend. show less
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Loud Sparrows: Contemporary Chinese Short-Shorts
Classifications
- Genre
- Fiction and Literature
- DDC/MDS
- 895.1 — Literature & rhetoric Asian Literature Literatures of East and Southeast Asia Chinese
- LCC
- PL2653 .L65 — Language and Literature Languages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania Languages of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania Chinese language and literature Chinese literature Collections
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 16
- Popularity
- 1,445,658
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (5.00)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2




