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320 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2002
Da Chen, a Chinese author, born in 1962 in Fujian, China, graduated from Columbia Law School in 1990, and Beijing Language and Culture University. He lives in California with his wife and two children. He has several best-selling books, focusing either on fictional adventures in Ancient China, or memoirs focusing on his life in China before coming to the United States. Sounds of the River ( Full title, Sounds of the River: A Young Man's University Days in Beijing, or Sounds of the River: a Memoir) , is part of the latter category. Sounds of the River chronicles his late teenage years to young adult life, as a university student then worker in Beijing. At face value, this book may seem boring, although it is much more entertaining than it seems.
For the first part of this book, it is quite boring. Large amounts of time is spent on bland, simple worldbuilding, and while the main character has struggles, it is hard to empathize with him as he seems at times either too perfect, or at times, acts naive. However, from there, it starts to focus more on the characters, along with the different worlds that Da, the protagonist, belongs to. This is when it starts to get truly interesting. Although it starts at a slow pace, together with the fact that, at times, it seems like the MC has life going too well for him stop it from being perfect, the characters, settings, and themes explored make this book excellent.
The characters in this book have a unique quality to them that makes them especially easy to relate to, especially considering that they are very vulgar, talk and act like teenagers and young adults do today. This book also does a fantastic job of rotating out different characters, each having a different feel, which allows the cast to develop and become entertaining, while at the same time not getting stale or boring. In the stages of Da’s university life, there are two individual characters which remain extremely relatable, then his family. The first, and perhaps most tragic, is his roommate Bo. Bo is similar to Finny in A Separate Peace, as he seems as if he can do no wrong in the eyes of authority, also he’s usually the one to think of dangerous, fun ideas. There's something different about Bo, however. He’s introduced as someone who’s assured of what he wants and is not afraid of the law.
That’s the outlandish Fujian mountain and border policy or whatever you call it. You’re in Beijing now, the center of everything. You can’t live like an ancient man under feudalism anymore. You’ve got to liberate yourself from those shackling ideas, college man, be independent and free. ( SoTR p. 21)
From there we’re given his background as the son of a wealthy family, but his family was never around, “You’d never want mine either, an empty life surrounded by luxury …. Not if you have no one to share it with.” ( SoTR p. 52).Following this, he gets even more complex. We soon learn that because of this fact, he is often depressed, with frequent mood swings. Da, being intensely focused on studies, ignores these signs and continues to enjoy the presence of Bo, until tragedy strikes, similarly to A Separate Peace . Da has to take this, as well as a physical problem, for a section of the book, but he manages to mostly overcome both, leaving this heartfelt sentence for Bo. “ Bo, my friend, for any loss in our lives, we all have to pay a certain price, in not in sorrow then in pain. ” ( SoTR p. 194). The next character is his roommate in the adult stage of his life, Lee. Lee is particularly entertaining for his bluntness and realism, but at the same time is a true friend for Da and helps him realize things that his more optimistic attitude lets him miss. This is shown by a particular discussion between pages 287-88, where he helps him realize that his path to America is not even close to as clear as it might seem, while at the same time being happy for him. But what may be the most important group of characters, more so than his mentor Professor Tu, even more so than the various religious believers that pull him in different directions, are his family. While his mother and father influence him the most as far as advice and how much he references them, “ Thank you, Mommy. I wish you had told me more. ”( SoTR p. 56), when he goes back to Yellow Stone on vacation, it is abundantly clear how much he loves his entire family, he constantly misses them and feels proud for them. They perhaps, more than anything, are the reasons why he does not change for the negative throughout the course of the story, they are the reasons he stays strong.
The settings in this story, combined with the characters, give this book a sense of diversity that is perhaps unrivaled. Beijing is a place of diversity, a place where anything seems possible, while Yellow Stone is a rural, country area where everyone is hardy, skilled with land, and everyone knows each other. Perhaps even more important, America, the land of dreams and opportunities, the ultimate goal that must be achieved at all costs, yet the government remains wary and very exacting in choosing people to send there. However, little hints are dropped that America may not be all it is hyped up to be. “I’m so sorry to hear That. Nothing seems secure in America. In our school, no one gets fired.”( SoTR p. 286). This creates an interesting juxtaposition between the nation Americans know it to be and how it is seen by foreigners, presenting an interesting outsider’s perspective.
Finally, the themes seen in this book combine all of this into several questions. These, and several positive messages that are reflected in this true story, are referenced multiple times, often becoming blurred in the life of Da. Several arguments, such as city vs country, Americans and other foreigners vs Chinese, rich vs poor, exemplified in the debate Da and Bo have on page 52, are seen and referenced multiple times throughout this story. Positive messages, such as the benefits of hard work, the values of good friends and strong friendships, like the brothers Da and his Yellow Stone friends consider themselves to be, are hammered in throughout. More, including responsibility “I should act more nobly, because everyone thought of me that way” ( SoTR p. 144), are also seen multiple times.
While those are the main reasons why this book is excellent, there are other minor reasons. This book goes through several stages of Da’s life, making for an extremely interesting adventure where it can be seen how he matures, changing from a naive country boy to a man, hardened and taught by the rigors of life. He started with a disadvantage but rose to the top, yet still keeps enough of his youthful innocence to be a likeable character who makes mistakes, needing his friends to help him fix them. Da’s shaded past, although it is covered in other memoirs that he has written, is teased throughout this book as a very painful time that he still reflects on, that feels uncomfortable to even think about. Yet, enough is kept secret to be interesting enough to want to find out more about, but enough is told so that it does not become frustrating. Being told from the perspective of someone speaking a foreign language, similarly to Before We Free , it is refreshingly direct and easy to understand. Religion is presented in many different ways to Da, and the religions in this book are all paid respect to, helping him out in many ways, while at the same time pulling him in two different directions, mostly between Buddhism and Christianity. “I grew up in a Buddhist family, but I have just been to a Christian service” ( SoTR p. 282) The government is at the beginning treated as something to be followed uncompromisingly, but eventually morphs into something negative and restricting, as Da sees more of the world and how the Communist party is flawed.
Sound of the River is a rousing adventure chronicling a young man’s university years, his maturation, triumphs, and failings during this time. Although it starts off slowly and Da’s life may at times seem a bit too perfect,the way it has a beautiful, complex cast of characters and settings, as well as tieing into positive themes and observing societal and national differences, as well as a host of other things such as religion and government, makes this an excellent book. Highly recommended.
Sounds of the River is a book written by Da Chen. Da Chen is a chinese author born in Fujian, China in 1962. He grew up in Fujian and later decided to move to beijing to attend college. The then finished top in his class and moved to the United States. He attended Columbia University with a full scholarship and graduated in 1990. He has written many other books about his life just like this one. In this book he wrote about his experience at college and the hardships he went through to be successful thus making this book a memoir. His experience at college took place a couple years after the death of Former Chairman of the Communist Party of China, Mao Zedong. This was a historic era for China and with Mao Zedong's influence still alive. There are many references to Communism in the book and it plays a big role throughout the book like the Chinese and foreigners separated in classes, dorms, and the cafeteria due to communism. Da Chen was also from a relatively poor family making college a big point in his life. I think that the main message of this book is that hard work and sacrifice will one day pay off.
Da Chen wrote this book masterfully. He made the book so realistic making the characters feel real. Reading this book made you feel like you were Da Chen and you were doing all this stuff. The way Da Chen wrote the book was a very realistic style. It gave huge detail to everything like what the soil smelled like to what a warm shower felt like. It made the book so much more real giving you the sense that you were there, it gave it a power of emotions that even the reader felt and knew what he was going through even though you really didn't. One weakness I encountered while reading this book was that sometimes it was so detailed and realistic that it became boring, but overall it didn't take away from the reading. A connection I made was to me and coming to Cardigan where my life changed. When I got to Cardigan, the first few weeks were hard. I was introduced to harder opportunities and had to make sacrifices and work harder to get good grades. Da also made sacrifices to become a better student and it helped him become successful. The author wrote this book for the reason of reflection to to show how hard work and sacrifice pays off. He proves this wonderfully and makes this book a great one to read. I really like this book and I recommend people to read this book if they are looking for an adventure of sacrifice and into the life of a young chinese man in college.
The book Sounds of the River was a book that affected my viewpoint of China. I personally do not like this book because this author is using his perspective talking about something that only happened to a specific type of people in China. For example in the previous of the book, there was an old lady on the train. However, she was a really rude lady that took Da's sit on the train. Although Da was holding his ticket and showing that he owned this spot, the old lady was not going anywhere. Then Da was looking for some help of people who sit nearby and finally stood out, helped him took his spot back. This was not usually happened at that time period, but that could be one of the possibilities. The way that he talked about this point was not a positive emotion, and he did not even talked about the possibility. This could cause some misunderstanding of some readers that are from other countries by giving them a bad impression of Chinese’ old men and women.
Once I got to the end of this book, I found out that he was actually lucky to studying in America, but he did not only work hard. He got lucky in his way to studying English. He got a great teacher, who would like to support him until the end of his journey and he got great parents, who would let him go to a far place from his home. At that time, Chinese parents did not like to let their children go far away from them because the war just ended and everybody wanted to protect their children under a safe place, but he got lucky to have that kind of parents, who would not mind him to go to America.
However, this book gave me some good impression, for example, I found out that this book’s title Sounds of the River is talking about the author’s mind and thought during this way studying English. He thinks that his way of learning English was like a river and he was following the sounds and got into MBA. This is a great thought from the author and this is a great point to point out.