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Braised Pork Kindle Edition
One autumn morning, Jia Jia walks into the bathroom of her lavish Beijing apartment to find her husband dead in their half-full bathtub. Like something out of a dream, Jia Jia discovers a pencil sketch of a strange watery figure next to the tub.
The mysterious drawing launches Jia Jia on an odyssey across contemporary Beijing, from its high-rise apartments to its hidden bars, as her path crosses some of the people who call the city home, including a jaded bartender who may be able to offer her the kind of love she had long thought impossible.
Unencumbered by a marriage that had constrained her, Jia Jia travels into her past in search of unspoken secrets. Her journey takes her to the high plains of Tibet, and even to a shadowy, watery otherworld. An atmospheric evocation of middle-class urban China, An Yu’s Braised Pork explores the intimate strangeness of grief, the indelible mysteries of unseen worlds, and a young woman’s empowering journey of self-discovery.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherGrove Press
- Publication dateApril 14, 2020
- File size3.0 MB
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Editorial Reviews
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An Indies Introduce Title
A New York Times Book Review Paperback Row Selection
“Produces its own kind of mind trip . . . Written with a shimmering lightness that maintains, as Jia Jia thinks of her watery visions, ‘some balance between mystery and simplicity’ . . . An also tucks a touching love story into the strange proceedings, which supplies enough incentive to keep Jia Jia―and the reader―equally invested in boring old reality.”―Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal
“An original and electric narrative . . . Yu’s language is sparse yet surreal . . . In Braised Pork, Yu raises provocative questions about why we get fixated on those moments―and how they might relate to the company we crave.”―Annabel Gutterman, TIME, “One of the Best Books of the Month”
“Braised Pork’s central journey is interior: the incremental and circuitous process of a human mind trying to come to terms with itself . . . A haunting, coolly written novel . . . Intensely atmospheric.”―Los Angeles Review of Books
“Yu’s prose is crisp and never tedious, with bursts of startling imagery amid the otherwise restrained style.”―Karen Cheung, New York Times Book Review
“Dreamy and surreal . . . What follows is her journey of rediscovery―of her passion, of her spirituality, of her artistic abilities, and of herself―that evolves in her real life and in dreams. It’s otherworldly and deeply moving.”―BuzzFeed
“Outstanding . . . Unforgettable . . . There is a kind of magic in the way the reader is also constantly submerged with Jia Jia for just long enough, before catching breath on the surface . . . Utterly original . . . A unique, metaphysical, and surreal tale of a woman that seeks answers in a world that has so often betrayed her with silence.”―Asian Review of Books
“In searching for answers to her husband’s untimely death, a young widow in Beijing finds room to explore her own existential angst . . . Yu’s original debut spins an increasingly surreal tale which brilliantly mirrors Jia Jia’s own discombobulation . . . Proof positive that rebirths are entirely possible―even in one lifetime.”―Kirkus Reviews
“An’s poignant debut tells the story of a young woman trying to find purpose in her life in the wake of disorienting personal tragedy . . . An draws Jia Jia with great affection and sympathy as the character grapples with the elusive meaning of her dreams and powerful emotional experiences. Readers will be moved by An’s mature meditation on the often inexplicable forces that shape the trajectory of an individual life.”―Publishers Weekly
“Poignant . . . A moving, magical parable about a young woman’s journey of self-discovery and empowerment . . . Enchanting.”―Shelf Awareness
“The premise itself is intriguing enough, but the real magic is in watching Jia Jia stretch her limbs as she leaves behind a rather restrictive marriage and encounters places and people she never imagined. Come for the mystery, stay for self-discovery of a liberated woman.”―Literary Hub
“A startlingly original debut . . . While it’s easy to see that Braised Pork borrows something of Haruki Murakami’s brand of strange melancholia, there’s a startlingly original imagination of its own at work here . . . A sensitive portrait of alienated young womanhood.”―Guardian
“A seductive, sharply observed tale of love, loss and hope.”―Daily Mail
“An elegant, dreamlike tale of a woman’s self-realization, set in contemporary Beijing.”―Daily Telegraph
“Rich and strange . . . Wild and distinctive.”―Observer
“Strange and cinematic, this is an author to keep an eye on.”―Stylist
“Bold yet understated, Braised Pork is the debut of a supremely confident and gifted writer.”―Katie Kitamura, author of A Separation
“This exquisite novel is many things: a detective story in which the real object of pursuit is how one makes meaning of a sometimes ineffable existence; a meditation on the talismanic power of art and the indefatigability of the human spirit; and a many-faceted, perfectly cut gem of psychological portraiture set in well-wrought sentences burnished to a gorgeous luster. The emotions in this book keep pace with you, shadowing you with a quiet intensity, until in the last stretch they overtake you completely.”―Matthew Thomas, New York Times-bestselling author of We Are Not Ourselves
“Yu is a fantastic storyteller. The prose is sly and controlled, yet page after page, I found myself spellbound by a story that does what all writers hope to do, which is to make the familiar unfamiliar.”―Weike Wang, author of Chemistry
“What a singular, slippery, transfixing novel this is. An Yu achieves a hypnotizing emotional clarity as she takes her narrator ever further from a stifling life in Beijing into a watery realm unlike any I’ve read before.”―Idra Novey, author of Those Who Knew
“Braised Pork is mesmerizing, incisive, and utterly disarming. An Yu writes beautifully about loneliness, the experience of isolation―from others, from one’s own past―and the possibility of human connection, however fragile.”―Rosie Price, author of What Red Was
“What a voice An Yu unfurls in Braised Pork. So elegant and poised, so tuned to the great mysteries of love and loss. Like a breeze on a still day, hers is a sound I didn’t know I needed until I felt it. Braised Pork is a major debut.”―John Freeman, author of Dictionary of the Undoing
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B07YR6ZBBG
- Publisher : Grove Press
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : April 14, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 3.0 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 242 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-0802148735
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #916,787 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #881 in Metaphysical Fiction
- #1,694 in Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction (Books)
- #1,713 in Women's Psychological Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

An Yu was born and raised in Beijing, and left at the age of eighteen to study in New York at NYU. A graduate of the NYU MFA in Creative Writing, she writes her fiction in English. She is twenty-eight years old and lives between Paris and Hong Kong. Braised Pork is her first novel.
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Customers find the writing quality of the book very good. They appreciate the author's appeal, with one customer describing her as a romantic artist.
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Customers find the author appealing, with one describing her as a romantic artist.
"...A detailed descriptor and romantic artist: When I read the book, the most impressive thing that I gained from every single word of the book is..." Read more
"...few really terrible similes, the writing is very good and the woman is very appealing...." Read more
"...The writing is simple and beautiful" Read more
Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book.
"...An experienced and well-structured writer: Although it is the author’s first published book, I doubt that the author should have written many..." Read more
"...Despite a few really terrible similes, the writing is very good and the woman is very appealing...." Read more
"...The writing is simple and beautiful" Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 25, 2020This review does not focus on the contents of the book. Instead, I would like to discuss about what I can see about the author behind the book.
(1) A detailed descriptor and romantic artist: When I read the book, the most impressive thing that I gained from every single word of the book is its detailed descriptions of every scene in every chapter. From the facial expressions of the main characters to the positions of the fingers of those characters, from the psychological activities within those minds to the corresponding reactions towards the outside environment, from the noisy bar to the cold night outside the Central Business District in Beijing, from the communications with local Tibet people to the natural scene in a Tibet village, from the talks with the sales agent, client and travel guide to the chats with father, father’s new wife, maternal grandmother, aunt and old and new friends, ……, all show that the author has a solid foundation to vividly describe every scene set in her book. I believe that only if had she already generated a “true” video in her mind, she was able to write in such a detailed way.
Those detailed descriptions combined with the painting, which is the career of the main character, Jiajia, make me further guess that the author may be an outstanding professional not only in writing but also in painting, because the learning of painting, no matter what kind of, always requires careful observations about the life.
In addition, I think that the author is very suitable to further explore her career in writing the scripts of plays because of her writing strengths mentioned above.
(2) A creative thinker and surrealistic dreamer: I think that the most creative factor in this book is the silver fish with a man’s head and a fish’s body which is the main stream of the book and is repeatedly mentioned from different perspectives in every chapter. Although the author connects the silver fish to different characters (Jiajia’s deceased mother and husband, the grandpa in the Tibet village) via multiple stories, she does not explicitly conclude what the silver fish mean in the end, leaving enough space to the readers to think about following the last word of the last chapter. As the news mentions that the author once studied in the Creative Writing Program in New York University, it is no wonder that she creates such kind of surrealistic world for both her and us readers to dream and explore.
(3) An experienced and well-structured writer: Although it is the author’s first published book, I doubt that the author should have written many draft books before but does not let them make public. Why? Based on my own reading experience, I can see that she has a very elaborated skill to control the rhythm of the whole story, a skill which should be gained by accumulated experience of writing long stories rather than pieces of essays or short stories.
In conclusion, I think that the book deserves the spotlight from both Foyles Bookstore (located in Charles Street in London), which put the book on the first rank of the book shelf facing the entrance door and the recommendations from multiple eye-catching newspapers such as New York Times, Guardian and TIME. Those modern experienced writers may feel pressure, because the sense of “长江后浪推前浪” (The waves behind the Yangtze River push the waves forward) jumps out from the book itself.
I look forward to the author’s second book, which the news mentions that will be published late this year or early next year.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2020I very much enjoyed Braised Pork, not withstanding that I never came to an understanding or appreciation of the “World of Water”, and the idea is an important plot device. (Reading the Guardian book review did not help). “Braised Pork” is the story of a youngish woman, with something of an unhappy childhood, who finds herself over the course of the novel. While you are privy to her thoughts, the novel exemplifies showing rather than telling. Despite a few really terrible similes, the writing is very good and the woman is very appealing. About her mother: “the way she’d lain in the hospital bed, pale and hopeless like a white flower petal that had been tweezed off its stem.” After a miscarriage, “Although nothing had changed, the apartment started to feel empty, as if we once had a child and now the child was gone.”
SPOILER ALERT. Toward the end, Jia Jia finally reconnects with her father, and thereby comes to more accurately remember her past. She falls in love for the first time, with the man she had had a dalliance with. The reader realizes this by such sentences as “She could picture him at the bar, ……….. When was the last time an image had brought her so much comfort?” “Jia Jia focused her attention fully on him for the first time that night.” (I read that as the first time ever, although the sentence is ambiguous).
- Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2020Let me say upfront that my review of Braised Prok is shaped by the fact that I'd been thinking of it as a mystery novel, which it isn't. A mysterious novel, yes. A mystery novel, no. I kept waiting for the kinds of moves I anticipate in a mystery novel and was puzzled at not finding them. I'm now writing this review in retrospect, reinterpreting my impressions to fit the novel's actual intent.
Braised Pork is a sort of liquid, drifting read. The action seems to be driven by invisible currents, as much as by human intention. The characters feel as if they're seen through water or watery glass. They have interesting characteristics, but the reader is never sure she's seeing them clearly.
Once you give yourself to the novel's style and rhythm, Braised Pork offers a lot to mull over. The central character, Wu Jia Jia, married not for love, but as a result of rational thought. She and her husband didn't share passion, but did share a sense of the the purpose of married life and their roles in it. When he husband dies—probably by suicide, though that's never definitively stated—Jia Jia finds herself exploring her world in ways she'd never imagined possible.
Jia Jia's explorations are set off by a sketch made by her husband of a "fish-man," a creature with a fish's body and a man's head. This image is impossible to let go of, but at the same time is elusive. Jia Jia is a painter, but every time she tries to pain the fish-man she finds it impossible to depict his face. The novel follows her search for a clearer vision of this creature—and in this search Jia Jia makes some unanticipated discoveries about herself and her family.
Braised Pork is a gem of a book, once the reader accepts it for what it is. Immerse yourself in it when you feel willing to float, to let images assemble gradually.
I received an electronic review copy of this book from the publisher via EdelweissPlus. The opinions are my own.
Top reviews from other countries
- D. A.Reviewed in Canada on July 19, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars wow.
wow. This has got to be one of the most original and enthralling books I've ever read. Totally unlike anything I've ever read. Can't wait for the next book from this author.
- Jon A. CrowcroftReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 15, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars metaphysics and widowhood
This is a happy mix of Murakami style metaphysical/magical riffing on a parallel world (the dark, the sea) and the delayed reaction of a (relatively) young wife's reaction to her somewhat unlovable husband's bizarre demise.
The writing and characterisation are beautiful- the settings (mainly Beijing and a Tibetan village, when in our world) are captured nicely.
For me, the conceit worked and I liked the characters (mainly), but I can see some people might not get on so well with the fishman.
- Dr. Tim ParkerReviewed in Canada on July 11, 2020
3.0 out of 5 stars Well written, but the story simply didn't do it for me. To each their own!
I ordered this book based on a recommendation about books of the year in a weekly newsmagazine. Unfamiliar with the author, I figured the strong recommendation was enough. It was. Sorta.
The book revolves around a Chinese woman who's husband is found dead, leaving behind a "fish-man" reference. The story hinges on her coping with the loss of her husband (who she wasn't that close to) and the hunt for the "fish-man" and her own psychological condition. Along the way she meets a prospective husband, and several strangers who's own stories revolve around the same fish-man. The writing is clean, and it's easy to read this relatively short book fairly quickly (I read it over a weekend, spending a few hours each session). There's a lot of Chinese references which may confound some readers, but having lived in China and with a Chinese wife and family, it was not an issue for me.
Is the story that good? Does it deserve the praise other reviewers are heaping on the book? For me, no, alas. While the book was interesting, it was a little disjointed in the way it pursued a relatively simple plot line, and, quite simply, I didn't get hooked the way I want to. Of course, that's one person's opinion, but I read a great deal, and this simply wasn't my cup of tea.
- ELReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 16, 2023
4.0 out of 5 stars Great first novel but...
Like an early Murakami. Hints of the surreal but needs more development. Good narrative but promised more. Hopefully future works will be even more compelling.
- Kat BReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 14, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars It looks brand new
Book cake like brand new