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War Trash |
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A story that opens a window on an unknown aspect of a little-known war—the experiences of Chinese POWs held by Americans during the Korean conflict— which paints an intimate portrait of conformity and dissent against a sweeping canvas of confrontation. [Pantheon Books]
Pantheon Books, 368 pages
10/05/2004
$25.00
ISBN: 0375422765
Fiction
Historical Fiction
All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...
The average user rating for this book is 8.7 (out of 10) based on 10 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
TheKate M gave it a10:
So meticulous and haunting! It has been over a year and dozens of books since I have read this and it still stalks the periphery of my mind.
dave g gave it a10:
Exciting. War Trash and Waiting are his best.
Bob L gave it a9:
Well written book and gives an insight of what life was like as a POW and the influence of other captives on daily existence. Although it is fiction it does bring home the suffering of soldiers away from home.
Paul H gave it a10:
Wonderful, this and Kafka on the Shore are the two best novels I've read in a long while.
Stone J gave it a10:
"Who can bear the weight of a war?" asks Yu Yuan. "To make witness is to make the truth known, but we must remember that most victims have no voice of their own, and that in bearing witness to their stories we must not appropriate them." Yu has borne such weight for fifty years. Conscripted by the then newly-founded Chinese Communist Party into fighting in Korea, captured and thrown into a POW camp, he became caught between allegiances, his fate determined by warring political ideologues who viewed his skills as an English translator as a tool for their own ends. Ha Jin's novel, War Trash, is a most unsettling book; a fictional memoir so seamless and genuine it reads as non-fiction. Fusing violent history and glowing imagination, written in the first-person style of a man translating his Chinese thoughts into English phrases, War Trash is so finely hued, so real, it takes one's breath away. Yu, now an elderly teacher writing his account "in a documentary manner so as to preserve historical accuracy," is hardly a vibrant character. A natural sceptic, Yu is an unassuming man whose only wish during his internment was to return to China. Life as a POW is not forgiving to those who would remain neutral, as the politics of prisoners serve to form a dangerous microcosm of battling belief systems. Pro-Nationalists treat Communist Party members as traitors to China, dealing out horrific brutalities to loyalists of Mao's philosophy. The Communists, however, judge their principles more important than the safety and security of their soldiers, their leaders fixated on propaganda and grabbing headlines. Yu witnesses scores of his comrades slaughtered in tragic prison uprisings designed to promote ideology, fuelling Yu's reflection that "war was an enormous furnace fed by the bodies of soldiers." Jin, National Book Award winner for his novel The Waiting, has fashioned a delicate novel that functions on many levels. As moral allegory, War Trash serves as warning to those who blindly obey, realizing that the path to self-realization is best served by one's own judgements, and not the dogma of others. Likewise, as political commentary, the parallels to the abuses of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay scarcely need mentioning. When Yu comments on the Koreans' hostility toward the Chinese, "To them we had come here only to protect China's interests - by so doing, we couldn't help but ruin their homes, fields, and livelihoods," a more apt description of the current Iraq war there couldn't be. War Trash is not meant as polemic; it is a story first, told by a man whose mere survival speaks volumes to his courage. Like Thomas Keneally's recent, unfairly ignored work The Tyrant's Novel, it is a tale of man's awakening to the world state, and his fight to make peace within himself when all about is chaos. Completing Yu's tale with a perfectly tuned atmosphere of sorrow, Jin writes an ending of haunting simplicity. "Do not take this to be an "our story"," Yu writes. "I have just written what I experienced." What Yu experienced was terrifying. What Jin presents is phenomenal.
ra l gave it a10:
This is the most soul wrenching tale of deceit and gorey trauma that I have ever read. You must read this book.

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