
Ma Yuan Snow District Novel Series (set of 2 Volumes in Total)
by Ma Yuan
About This Novel
A must-read classic of contemporary literature, the secret realm, distance and narrative trap created by a pioneering writer; Ma Yuan, the "Western Poison" of the Five Tigers in the literary world, writes about "the kind of life that Tibetans have lived for thousands of years" in a deeply spiritual language; 16 snowy area stories, 16 ways to travel on the snowy plateau; the light of inspiration from the snowy plateau plus the maze of strange and magnificent words. "The Temptation of Gangdise" is a collection of short stories and short stories written by the writer Ma Yuan when he lived in Tibet. Includes eight articles including "The Temptation of Gangdise", "Sailboats in the West Sea", "Impression of Mountains" and "Three Methods of Filing Paper Harriers". These novels revolve around the stories of "me" or "my" friends who are literary and art workers from the Mainland, or Tibetan friends on the snowy plateau: "I" and my friends were exploring savages, a poor man hunted bears alone, a little shepherd made a pilgrimage across the snowy mountains, and three old ladies who lived alone each carried their own mysterious past... Most of them were people who had become solitary due to twists and turns of fate or romantic feelings. They were characterized by loneliness and suffering, but they also burst out with amazing courage and perseverance from time to time. At the same time, these novels open up the boundaries of narrative and use the mysterious atmosphere of Tibet to construct a dreamlike narrative maze. "Lhasa River Goddess" contains eight short stories and short stories written by the famous writer Ma Yuan when he lived in Tibet, including "Fiction", "Lhasa River Goddess", "Himalaya Ancient Songs" and "Three Times of Life in Lhasa". The snowy plateaus in these novels are surrounded by everything ordinary and extraordinary: lepers live peacefully in the peach blossom garden, old hunters confide in silent mountains and forests, beggars in the bustling city carry anecdotes and secret treasures with them, young people trapped in daily trivial matters unknowingly walk into their fate... The writer walks along the Lhasa River, wandering between different stories, cleverly burying metaphors, and projecting a keen eye for continuous exploration of human nature.
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