A Harvard student from China discovers the fraught, hidden history of the Tiananmen Square massacre in this powerful novel of protest and suppression from the National Book Award–winning author.
When the Chinese premier visits Harvard, international student Pei Lulu encounters a lone protester, who will drastically change her understanding of the People's Republic and her own place in the world. For the first time, Lulu learns of the 1989 protest movement and the government’s violent response. Determined to find out more, she seeks answers from her family, who share surprising stories of their involvement, and from a formative university course based on powerful firsthand accounts.
At once a compelling coming-of-age tale and a poignant tribute to the courage of activists, Looking for Tank Man keeps this tragedy alive in the public memory and warns against the dangers of authoritarian regimes.
Ha Jin is the pen name of Jin Xuefei, a novelist, poet, short story writer, and Professor of English at Boston University.Ha Jin writes in English about China, a political decision post-Tiananmen Square.
Ha Jin grew up in mainland China and served in the People’s Liberation Army in his teens for five years. After leaving the army, he worked for three years at a railroad company in a remote northeastern city, Jiamusi, and then went to college in Harbin, majoring in English. He has published in English ten novels, four story collections, four volumes of poetry, a book of essays, and a biography of Li Bai. His novel Waiting won the National Book Award for Fiction, the PEN/Faulkner Award, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Ha Jin is William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor in English and Creative Writing at Boston University, and he has been elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. His writing has been translated into more than thirty languages. Ha Jin’s novel The Woman Back from Moscow was published by Other Press in 2023.
Thoroughly enjoyed everything about this book, the story, the writing and the historical information. This unusual coming-of age story tells the tale of Pei Lulu as she navigates her life as a female Chinese student in the U.S. in 2008. She first learns of the 1989 Tiananmen Massacre and Tank Man while attending Harvard and is shocked that the Chinese government actively suppresses information about this event. When she discovers her parents were involved in the protest movement resulting in the Massacre she becomes intrigued and decides to pursue a Ph.D. at Columbia with this as her thesis topic.
Like Lulu and the students at the start of the book, I knew nothing about the Massacre of hundreds to thousands of peaceful protesters (accounts vary, Chinese government says hundreds, other say up to 10,000). Also did not know about Tank Man, an iconic photo of a man standing in front of a column of tanks. Even today the identity of this man remains unknown. Recommend this for both the well-written story and the light it shines on a tragic event to prevent its erasure.
For over thirty years Ha Jin has been using his voice through literature to expose the inhumanity of the Chinese Communist Party. His most recent novel Looking for Tank Man (2025) is a memorable academic thriller that confronts China’s systematic attempts to erase the Tiananmen Square massacre from public consciousness.
Similar to how Ha Jin himself studied abroad in America and later defected from China and became a US citizen, his protagonist Pei Lulu is an international student studying history at Harvard in 2008. Soon thereafter she learns for the first time of the violence carried out by the People’s Liberation Army against students protesting for reform in Tiananmen Square in 1989. Such a shocking revelation leads Lulu on a mission to investigate the tragedy and pursue a PhD focused on the iconic “Tank Man” who dared to sacrifice his life and halt a line of tanks headed to Beijing to suppress what the Communist Party leaders falsely declared was a violent insurrection trying to overthrow the government.
Lulu’s research uncovers secrets about the involvement of her own parents in the Tiananmen protests while she also tries piecing together a conclusion about Tank Man. Was he a student protestor whose act of defiance was accidently caught on camera? Or did the Communist Party leaders stage the event to propagandize their narrative that no violence was used to end the student protests? Ultimately, whatever happened to Tank Man? Was he punished, or is he still alive and forced by the government to keep his identity concealed?
The fact is that Tank Man remains a mystery, even as his iconic image took on a life of its own, and he continues to resonate decades later as a universal symbol of resistance and freedom. Through the awakening of Lulu and her research, Ha Jin offers glimpses into the maniacal policies implemented by the People’s Republic to erase Tank Man and the Tiananmen Square massacre from the memory of China’s citizenry.
Lulu’s story blends her own personal struggles as an immigrant in America with the high stakes challenges of academic rigor to uncover new truths about history. Ha Jin’s smooth and engaging prose flies off the page with its clarity to tackle big ideas, and in scenes of grave tension he shows how the function of totalitarian regimes is almost comical if their practices weren’t so terrorizing.
Looking for Tank Man kept me riveted to Lulu’s search for truth and to the courage of so many Chinese dissidents and activists resisting the tyranny of their motherland. Even though the novel’s ending comes off somewhat anticlimactic, its totality makes obvious the parallels Ha Jin paints between what the Chinese Communist Party has tried to do with rewriting the history of the Tiananmen massacre and what Trump has done to sanitize his fomenting of violent insurrectionists who attacked the Capitol on January 6, 2021 in his attempts to retain unlawful power.
I enjoyed it in a way that was informative. This is my first time reading a Ha Jin book. Because of the nature of the subject, I’ve always had a slight hesitation to learn more about it.
But I found myself googling as I read even though I felt little attachment to the character LuLu despite her role as the protagonist.
I also thought the sex scenes came out of nowhere. Understandable almost…but what?
The peaceful student protests at Tiananmen Square and the Chinese government's violent reaction, is indelible in my brain. And, the erasure of history and the general Chinese population's lack of knowledge is a portent to what is currently happening in the US. Lulu is a Chinese student at Harvard and has no idea what happened before she was born. She soon decides to educate herself, sending her on a course of subtle activism about Tiananmen Square. And she becomes fascinated with Tank Man, which may or may not have been a staged event. This coming of age isn't just her going through college but about interrogating history and ignorance as well as learning about her parents' past and involvement with the student movement.
I received an arc from the publisher but all opinions are my own.
I agree with Andrew Taylor's 3-star review. As a novel it's so-so and the ending is a dud. The possibility of the tank man photo being staged as Chinese propaganda is intriguing. On a personal level I could relate to the main character's Ph.D. studies at Columbia, since I got a Ph.D. there in the late '70s. No doubt Ha Jin is right about China being a vast "pig farm."
The real value of the book is its depiction of how the Chinese Communist government has whitewashed the Tienanmen Massacre and oppressed the population.
A few quotes I liked: "To remember is the most efficient way to fight the authoritarian power that makes people forget. A historian's business is to remember." (Tiananmen activist character Loana) "...we felt we were living in a tight net, as if there were an invisible wall around us all the time. I had heard that ultimately the government intended to turn the country into a wall-less prison, since most things can be handled electronically, and that we were heading toward a cashless society. If you are identified as an unacceptable citizen, the state can invalidate your ID and close your bank account. And then you will be impounded and even earning a living will be out of the question, since you can't buy groceries or travel anywhere. Whenever you went out, the police would be alerted and follow you. This electronic imprisonment will become the common condition for most Chinese in the future. In some netizens' words, 'Even if you grew wings, you couldn't fly anywhere. You'll be grounded in this immense pig farm.'" (Lulu, after a run-in with State Security)
It’s taken me a few days to compose my thoughts on Looking For Tank Man, mainly because the subject matter loomed large over me. The novel follows Lulu, a Chinese academic completing her studies at Harvard and, later, Colombia. Her interests lie in the controversy of the Tiananmen Square Massacre of 1989, particularly in Tank Man – an icon of the socio-political moment and a hugely contested figure. Looking for Tank Man articulates the power and danger of protest, especially in a space of surveillance and censorship. I really enjoyed the academic perspective of the novel, particularly in how Lulu reckoned with her personal connections to Tiananmen and her understanding of her US citizenship. That being said, I think too often the story shifted into an essay, too closely mimicking the academic prose of a dissertation and disregarding plot and pacing.
I was particularly interested in how Ha Jin presented the Chinese government – providing subtle interjections and close calls with them, without explicitly providing us with an inside perspective. Lulu has numerous interactions with the regime without being allowed in to the inner workings of government – mirroring Tank Man’s ambiguity and leaving her and her fellow students to piece together what was real and what was smoke and mirrors.
A huge thank you to the Other Press team for sending me a proof in exchange for an honest review.
A young Chinese woman studying at Harvard learns for the first time of the existence of the Tiananmen Square massacre, as all information about the student demonstration for democracy is brutally suppressed, even criminalized, by the authoritarian Chinese government. She’s especially captivated by photos of “tank man,” the young man who stationed himself in front of a line of tanks, preventing their forward progress. The more she learns about the events of that time, the more fascinated she becomes and the more determined to keep digging for the truth. Her interest changes the direction her life takes, as she decides to continue her studies in the States beyond an undergraduate degree, spending summers in China with her single mother. Her growing knowledge changes her sense of her country, and as she tries to continue her research during visits home, she is menaced by the police, and monitored when she’s in the States.
a strange book where, in the beginning i was frustrated because there's no real exigence in the traditional sense, that the plot just seems to be a regular chinese student going through an american education. i felt a bit bored, because the prose felt flat and the characters not compelling, but as i stuck with it, i realized that the exigence/urgency in the present is constantly informed by the past, and in this case, efforts to erase the past. there are a lot of important things about china's socio-political landscape, its study in academia, and the people who study it or live it that ha jin doesn't miss: the white boy obsessed with the tank man figure, the rich chinese students who are china's main defenders against the west, the abuse of power a phd advisor has over his student, and at its center, the nuance in origin, dissemination, impact of tank man as a cultural icon. it's strange to see your life, your ideas about your country and the country you have left it for reflected so intimately in a book.
3.5 stars. 'Looking for Tank Man' is a novel with the spirits of a memoir and academic nonfiction. The academic research was impressive, and the various characters' discourse on China's socio-political landscape, Taiwan's sovereignty, and toggling one's life and effects between China and the US gave clear perspectives, drawn from both the real-life and theoretical.
On a personal note, 'Looking for Tank Man' made references to subjects and figures I recognized from my academic studies. From Chai Ling to Leftover Women, 'Looking for Tank Man' was intellectually stimulating while also viscerally touching, bringing me back to a specific time in my life and making me think about a life in China I could have lived.
This was a fun read! There were times when it dragged and that's why I knocked a star off but it was very informative. The writing style was easy to digest and made the history being thrown at you easy to understand and created a vivid picture. I enjoyed reading about Lulu's academic journey and her coming-of-age story while she discovers the truth about the Tiananmen Massacre as well as her own personal involvement! I wish I could have continued her journey with her and to me, that signals a great book! I've been inspired to consider continuing my educational journey and I will definitely be reading this again when I make a decision.
I have vague memories of hearing about the Tiananmen Square incident when it happened, but in the years since, the solitary image of the “tank man” has become my only touchstone to this atrocity. This fictional view of a young Chinese ex-pat searching for meaning in this person (hero? plant? normal person?) was a brisk read that educated me beyond that single moment that was captured on film. It also shows the fear the Chinese government instills in its populace, as her research moves her further away from the party line and her life becomes monitored.
I had such high hopes for this book as an avid reader of Ha Jin’s previous works, but this one fell a little flat. It was educational to learn about all the perspectives on Tiananmen Square-just needed more emotion and even elaboration. Still, these lines were highlights for me:
“The world is improved by impractical people” (p.101).
“We do something that can sustain our humanity and sanity” (p.123).
At its best, it examines the events at Tiananmen Square in a resoundingly holistic way meant to interest the reader, just like Lulu’s dissertation. At its worst (most of the book) it is a flat coming of age story with poor resolution. The ending fell to a thud and the book was just not the most fun to read.
I so enjoyed this book. I was fascinated by the long reach of the Chinese government into dissidents living around the world. I really didn’t know that some people did not believe what happened at Tiananmen Square. A girlfriend of mine‘s mother was there at the time and was witnessed to some of it. I was also intrigued by the whole set up of advanced academia. I recommend this book
I regret for the loss of originality and insights of Ha Jin. Books he wrote before are moving and insightful, yet now the book he presented to us is simply a stitch-up of déjà vu, médiocre plots and prose. What a shame.
Great read! I learned significantly about Tiananmen Square, both related recent events and historical occurrences. However, I did feel that the narrator’s voice did not like a female voice always. I loved all the food descriptions.
I read it pretty quickly because the subject matter was interesting but the dialogue felt hammy to me. Also it really dragged toward the end. I could just barely finish it. And there were a lot of coming of age college cliches here.
This book was a difficult read based on the too detailed description of the individuals involved with the protest of Tiananmen Square. I found it very difficult to follow. Definitely, a subject that needs to be written and remembered.
This book felt a little short at the end of the day--I think I will have to think more about what it means to have found Tank Man, and whether or not Lulu ended up finding him within herself, as she says.