The Drunkard

Liu Yichang
4.42
194 ratings 23 reviews
The Drunkard is one of the first full-length stream-of-consciousness novels written in Chinese. It has been called the Hong Kong Novel, and was first published in 1962 as a serial in a Hong Kong evening paper. As the unnamed Narrator, a writer at odds with a philistine world, sinks to his drunken nadir, his plight can be seen to represent that of a whole intelligentsia, a whole culture, degraded by the brutal forces of history: the Second Sino-Japanese War and the rampant capitalism of post-war Hong Kong. The often surrealistic description of the Narrator's inexorable descent through the seedy bars and night-clubs of Hong Kong, of his numerous encounters with dance-girls and his ever more desperate bouts of drinking, is counterpointed by a series of wide-ranging literary essays, analysing the Chinese classical tradition, the popular culture of China and the West, and the modernist movement in Western and Chinese literature. The ambiance of Hong Kong in the early 1960s is graphically evoked in this powerful and poignant novel, which takes the reader to the very heart of Hong Kong. Hong Kong director Freddie Wong made a fine film version of the novel in 2004.
Genres: FictionChinaChinese LiteratureLiteratureContemporaryNovels
351 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
102 (53%)
4 star
73 (38%)
3 star
17 (9%)
2 star
2 (1%)
1 star
0 (0%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Liu Yichang

Lists with this book

Klara and the Sun
The Four Winds
Malibu Rising
Anticipated 2021 Literary Fiction
446 books587 voters
The Dawn and the Prince
Six Crimson Cranes
Call of Magic
The Most Beautiful Covers of 2021
268 books176 voters
To Kill a Mockingbird
Slaughterhouse-Five
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
Best Books of the Decade: 1960s
1349 books1774 voters