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The Years, Months, Days {novella}

by Yan Lianke

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261889,507 (3.83)11
The Years, Months, Days is a profound and moving fable about the deep love between an old man and his blind dog trying to survive in a terrible drought - there is no food, the villagers have left, but the old man has managed to nurture a corn seed that has germinated on a mountain top. He is devoted to this seedling. The old man weighs the rays of the sun, working out the arithmetic of starvation and survival. Finally he realises that for his plant to survive, one of them has to be fertiliser. He loses the coin toss, lies in a grave he has dug and asks the dog to bury him.… (more)
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» See also 11 mentions

Une vraie leçon d’agronomie, c’est ce que j’ai pensé à la lecture de ce livre. Toute l’ingéniosité d’un vieux paysan chinois livrant une bataille désespérée contre la sécheresse, déployant toute son ingéniosité et son savoir pour sauver ne serait-ce que ce dernier pied de maïs, car c’est l’avenir. Un seul épi de maïs, ce sont les semences de demain…
Mais ce n’est pas faire honneur à ce livre que de le réduire à cette seule dimension. Il y a certes cette connaissance viscérale de la terre, mais c’est aussi et surtout une ode à l’inébranlable entêtement humain, à celui qui nous fait traverser les siècles, qui nous fait perdurer, génération après génération.
Ce livre se veut une fable intemporelle et universelle : il n’y a aucune indication explicite de lieu ou de temps, même si un peu de connaissance d’histoire agricole pourrait permettre de deviner la région de Chine et la décennie, je ne m’y suis pas risquée. Je préfère conserver l’universalité de ce petit livre, poétique et triste, d’une tristesse résignée et transfigurée par la dignité de qui ne s’avoue jamais vaincu.
Je ne sais pas comment décrire ce genre de livre, trop poétique, trop subtil pour mon écriture, et c’est dommage car je ne suis pas sûre de lui faire justice et d’arriver à communiquer l’envie de le lire. Un livre à lire un après-midi d’été, quand le soleil tape tellement que l’on sent le poids de ses rayons…
  raton-liseur | Jun 7, 2010 |
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In the year of the great drought, time was baked to ash; and if you tried to grab the sun, it would stick to your palm like charcoal.
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The Years, Months, Days is a profound and moving fable about the deep love between an old man and his blind dog trying to survive in a terrible drought - there is no food, the villagers have left, but the old man has managed to nurture a corn seed that has germinated on a mountain top. He is devoted to this seedling. The old man weighs the rays of the sun, working out the arithmetic of starvation and survival. Finally he realises that for his plant to survive, one of them has to be fertiliser. He loses the coin toss, lies in a grave he has dug and asks the dog to bury him.

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