“My experience dealing with professors has taught me that educated people have the ability to demean a person with a single glance. His friend didn't seem like your average guy either. A thick mustache guarded his mouth, making him look a little like Friedrich Engels.”
“As we waited, I flipped through their CD collection; all of it dated pop music, mostly pirated. I have no opinion when it comes to my clients musical tastes. It doesn't matter to me if they like classical, blues, jazz, or even glass shattering heavy metal. But honestly, spending a hundred and fifty thousand yuan on an Acapella set just to listen to pirated CDs seemed unbelievable. I realized that I had been taking this job a little too seriously, spending two weeks fine tuning the amp to perfection.”
“Now is a good time to say something about my ex-wife, Yufen. We met before I started in the audio industry. I was selling shoes at a famous shoe shop on the main boulevard. I noticed her the moment she walked into the store. There was no way you couldn't notice her. She had that pure, perfect face that gives you a feeling like a razor slash across the heart. You felt as if you'd risk your life just to be with her.”
“Before leaving she asked me a question. She had been shoe shopping the whole day, and had tried on hundreds of pairs without finding anything she liked. How had I done it? ‘Oh, that's not surprising. People are always choosing things that don't fit them.’ Looking back at the way things turned out that innocent remark was more like an omen.”
“Sometimes poor people get lucky enough to find treasures too. But you'll never be able to keep her. The most you can do with a woman like this is take your turn and enjoy her. When the time comes she'll go where she must go. What is the most valuable thing anyone can ever have? It’s your life, isn't it? But you can hold on as tightly as you can, and you'll still have to let go when the time comes, won't you?"
“My sister had given me an ultimatum to move out of her apartment at once. As she pushed me to my emotional limit, I gritted my teeth and agreed. After forty eight years of fighting on this earth, I was about to become homeless. A pang of hopelessness and fatigue pierced my chest.”
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Ge Fei is a Chinese writer who gained acclaim in the late ‘80s and ‘90s and is currently professor of literature at Tsinghua University in Beijing. This 2012 novel was translated by the New York Review of Books in 2016. The protagonist Cui is a divorced custom stereo amp builder whose sister Lihua and her idiot brother-in-law Baoguo are intending to evict from their apartment. His attractive ex-wife Yufen is remarried and pregnant but wants to rekindle an affair with him. He ridicules the intellectuals and businessmen who buy his equipment, as his friend Songping helps to lure in more wealthy customers.
After agreeing to move out Cui has few options where to go. Songping who runs a shirt factory rejects his requests to stay at one of his buildings temporarily, but he provides a lead to a client Ding, a potentially dangerous character, who asks him to build ‘the highest quality stereo system in the world’. With nowhere to live he decides to put together a $50,000 setup sacrificing his rare speakers to buy a farmhouse. After the equipment is delivered the balance still remains unpaid weeks later. Baoguo is threatening him and he has days to leave the apartment. He asks Songping for a loan but is turned down.
Much of this book has to do with the withering effects of capitalism in China. Traditional friendships and relations were now meaningless in a scramble to make money. His mother had warned him Yufen wouldn’t stay with him and suddenly he realizes the meaning of her words; that a man of his means will never be able to hold on to the things he cherishes. Cui travels back to Sleeping Dragon Valley in an attempt to collect payment on the sound system but instead he finds redemption in an unexpected way. In the process he has lost his best friend and sister but comes to discover that life is still beautiful.
It is mysterious that Ge Fei hasn’t published another novel in the last twelve years. I could easily read more if they are as good as this one. Luckily the first volume of his Jiangnan Trilogy has also been translated by NYRB, ‘Peach Blossom Paradise’ (2004), his most famous work. ‘Invisibility Cloak’ was the winner of the Lu Xun Prize in 2013, awarded every three years in China. The Beijing of 2012 is like any world city: crowded, cosmopolitan and competitive. Fei shows the absurd and shallow qualities of his characters in a comical way, and yet there is a dark undercurrent that flows just beneath the surface.