Reading the future
Updated: 2015-01-14 07:34
By Xing Yi(China Daily)
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A reader looks at a new book on Chinese President Xi Jinping at the 2015 Beijing Book Fair. [Photo by Wang Jing/China Daily] |
2015 Beijing book fair foretells literary and publishing trends. Xing Yi reports.
A new chapter in China's literary legacy can be read from the thrust of the 2015 Beijing Book Fair.
New works, new trends and new media have emerged at one of China's main literary events, which is viewed as a crystal ball divining the publishing industry's near future.
The three-day event closed on Saturday.
While tradition has proven popular as a theme among authors, innovation is publishers' foremost concern.
A highlight release was award-winning novelist Chi Zijian's Qun Shan Zhi Dian (The Peak of the Mountains). Her first book since 2010 continues her focus on northern China-the 50-year-old hails from the country's northernmost county, Heilongjiang province's Mohe-and depicts the struggles of ordinary yet unique individuals in a fictional village.
China Writers' Association Vice-President Li Jingze says: "I feel the inarticulate characters' loneliness. They all have something in their hearts but don't know how, or to whom, to express it. Fortunately, we still have writers like Chi Zijian, who can give them voices."
Chi won the country's top literary award, the Mao Dun Literary Prize, in 2008 for her novel The Last Quarter of the Moon. The book depicts the nomadic Evenki ethnic group's struggle along the country's northern border to rebuff incursions from the outside world over the past century.
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