In his novels and brief stories, Mr. Mo paints sprawling, perplexing portraits of Chinese farming life, mostly regulating flights of imagination — animal narrators, a underworld, elements of angel tales — that elicit a techniques of South American enchanting realists. His work has been widely translated and is straightforwardly accessible in a West, though he is maybe best famous abroad for "Red Sorghum" (1986; published in English in 1993) that takes on issues like a Japanese occupation, criminal enlightenment and a oppressive lives of farming Chinese, and that in 1987 was done into a movie destined by Zhang Yimou.
"Through a reduction of anticipation and reality, chronological and
Read full article: http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2012/s3597880.htm
Source:
http://www.ezonearticle.com/2012/10/11/chinas-mo-yan-wins-nobel-literature-prize/
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