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''Frontier'' is a novel by
Chinese Chinese can refer to: * Something related to China * Chinese people, people of Chinese nationality, citizenship, and/or ethnicity **''Zhonghua minzu'', the supra-ethnic concept of the Chinese nation ** List of ethnic groups in China, people of ...
avant-garde writer
Can Xue Deng Xiaohua (; born May 30, 1953), better known by her pen name Can Xue (), is a Chinese avant-garde fiction writing, fiction writer and literary criticism, literary critic. Her family was severely persecuted following her father being labeled a ...
. Set primarily in a location known as Pebble Town, it follows the misadventures of a group of loosely related characters that seem to be wandering in and out of each other's dreams. Each character seems to have arrived in Pebble Town for a different reason, and many are connected to an organization known as the Design Institute. First published in China in 2008, Open Letter Books published an English translation by Karen Gernant and Chen Zeping in 2017.


Characters

The characters featured in the novel include: * Qiming — The lovesick custodian at the Design Institute who obsesses over a Uighur woman he once met. * Liujin — A character who lives alone and sells cloth at the market. * Marco — The only major character actually born in Pebble Town. Marco is obsessed with Holland. * Juan and Nancy — A married couple who travel to Pebble Town from Smoke City. * Ying — The only black man living in Pebble Town.


Interpretation

Noting the enigmatic dialogue, contradicting moments, and lack of a clear revelation, J. Andrew Goodman argued that ''Frontiers'' expresses estrangement: "In spite of the small community and everyone's closeness, people are estranged from one another. In spite of people's settling in Pebble Town, they are still transient, aimless."


Reception

Amanda DeMarco wrote, "At the sentence level, 'Frontier''is a wonderful, carefully hewn thing, lucid and pure". Yun Ni criticized the replacement of Chinese names with homophonous English substitutes, saying that "complexities of the characters’ personalities reembodied in their Chinese names". She still called the translation "highly accomplished" and praised the novel as well. J. Andrew Goodman of ''The Collagist'' lauded the "simplicity of Can Xue's (or the translation of her text at least) language. ..she uses sparse words to describe the surroundings of Pebble Town, which works to its own great effect". Goodman also wrote, "Can Xue is masterful in her expression of feelings, how they physically manifest and how her characters wander and invite others into them." A ''
Publishers Weekly ''Publishers Weekly'' (''PW'') is an American weekly trade news magazine targeted at publishers, librarians, booksellers, and literary agents. Published continuously since 1872, it has carried the tagline, "The International News Magazine of ...
'' reviewer wrote, "Without the labor of critical reading, the surface-level narrative may be difficult to follow. Even if the actual events can be hard to parse, Can Xue’s powerful imagery will flood the senses and immerse readers in this magical world." Amal El-Mohtar described the book as one of precise subtlety and praised the translation, but wrote, "Patterns recur, but to track them or expect them to lead to something is a mistake." She seconded the view of
Porochista Khakpour Porochista Khakpour (Farsi: پوروچیستا خاکپور, born January 17, 1978) is an Iranian American novelist, essayist, and journalist. A refugee from Iran whose family fled the Iran-Iraq War and the Islamic Revolution, Khakpour grew up ...
in the introduction that "the book seems pleasurably to lengthen as we read it"; El-Mohtar concluded that "like Dubuffet's 'Shot in the Wing'' the more you look, the more you see, and the harder it is to speak of what you see to someone who isn't also looking."


References

2008 Chinese novels Chinese fantasy novels Open Letter Books books Works by Can Xue {{2000s-fantasy-novel-stub