Barefoot Doctor: A Novel

Can Can Xue
Translated by Karen Gernant , Zeping Chen
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Barefoot Doctor: A Novel

Can Can Xue
Translated by Karen Gernant , Zeping Chen
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Overview

272 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Sep 19, 2023
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 272
  • Publisher: Yale University Press
  • ISBN: 9780300274035
  • Dimensions: 5.0" W x 1.0" L x 7.75" H
Can Xue is the pseudonym of celebrated experimental writer Deng Xiaohua, born in 1953 in the city of Changsha. She is the author of Love in the New Millennium, I Live in the Slums, and Five Spice Street, among other books. Karen Gernant is a professor emerita of Chinese history. Chen Zeping was a professor emeritus of Chinese linguistics. Together, they have translated numerous works of Chinese literature.
Named by the New Yorker as a Best Book of 2022

“During the Cultural Revolution, minimally trained ‘barefoot doctors’ were sent to the Chinese countryside. . . . The author of this novel was one of them, and she draws on her experiences in the story of Mrs. Yi, a village herbalist who gathers her remedies on a nearby mountain . . . [but] events become increasingly surreal. As the mountain changes shape and ghosts visit the living, mysterious connections between the body and nature emerge.”—New Yorker

“A complex and illuminating portrait of a group of healers in China . . . [that] offers profound insights about what it means to pursue and live a fulfilling life.”—Publishers Weekly

“Over the course of the novel, Barefoot Doctor’s odd, fable-like logic becomes more insistent, and more persuasive. . . . The genres of historical commentary and autofiction aren’t big or wild enough to encapsulate this ambitious, mystical novel. Where history might be devastating, the soul is sublimely strange—and Barefoot Doctor is nothing if not a tale of miraculous, full-circle bafflement.”—Evangeline Riddiford Graham, Full Stop

“A barefoot doctor herself, [Can Xue] has a unique and powerful way of transporting readers to new worlds where reality and magic are intertwined, and she uses her own experiences to make this novel feel more personal.”—Emily Park, Booklist

“Out of all of Can Xue’s books in English translation, this novel is especially intimate, as she was a barefoot doctor herself once upon a time. I have no choice but to call this novel my favorite of hers yet—a feeling I have with every single book.”—Porochista Khakpour, author of Brown Album

“In Can Xue’s world eccentricity is the rule, and conversations are vital and multi-directional. It’s a constantly relational world, everyone is desiring, love is at the heart of her fiction. And what a love it is, random, magical, producing bursts of calm—which is why I read every one of Can Xue’s books. Can Xue is always an inestimable find.”—Eileen Myles, poet and author of For Now

“The true daughter of Kafka and Borges, Can Xue possesses one of the most glorious, original, vivid, poignant, hellacious imaginations on the planet. No reader emerges from her powerful fictional dreams unscathed, for her work is as dangerous as it is beautiful. She can infiltrate the deepest part of our human experience with such subtlety and totality that it takes my breath away."—Bradford Morrow, author of The Prague Sonata

Praise for the author:

“There’s a new world master among us and her name is Can Xue.”—Robert Coover

“If China has one possibility of a Nobel laureate it is Can Xue.”—Susan Sontag

“There’s something inescapably cosmic about [Can Xue’s] writing: the grandness of her vision, the abstraction of her thought, the way the details of lived reality seem to shrink and assume an equal significance, as though one were orbiting a distant star and peering down.”—Bailey Trela, Los Angeles Review of Books

“Can Xue is a master at twisting philosophical ideas into realities that seem simple but are incredibly thoughtful and intricate.”—Emily Park, Booklist

“There’s no other writer in China like Can Xue.”—Chad Post, Publishers Weekly



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