Looking for Tank Man

Ha Jin, 1956-

Book - 2025

"A Harvard student from China discovers the fraught, hidden history of the Tiananmen Square massacre in this powerful novel of protest and suppression from the National Book Award-winning author. When the Chinese premier visits Harvard, international student Pei Lulu encounters a lone woman protesting who will drastically change her understanding of the People's Republic and her own place in the world. For the first time, Lulu learns of the 1989 protest movement and the government's violent response. Determined to find out more, she seeks answers from her family, who share surprising stories of their involvement, and from a formative university course based on powerful firsthand accounts. At once a compelling coming-of-age ta...le and a poignant tribute to the courage of activists, Looking for Tank Man keeps this tragedy alive in the public memory and warns against the dangers of authoritarian regimes"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Other Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Ha Jin, 1956- (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781635423839
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In the clunky latest from Jin (The Banished Immortal), a Chinese Harvard student grows fixated on the Tiananmen Square Massacre. Having never learned of the atrocity as a girl in China, Pei Lulu is shocked to hear of it from a protester on campus in 2008, during a demonstration against the Chinese premier's visit. Galvanized, Lulu signs up for a seminar on the 1989 democracy movement with a Canadian Chinese professor, who encourages her to pursue graduate work in history, despite her mom's insistence that she move back to Beijing and marry. On summer trips back to China as an undergraduate and later while pursuing her PhD at Columbia, she learns her mother and father were both involved in the demonstration and is brought in for questioning by the police after she asks others about the events. Unruffled, she continues researching "Tank Man," the unidentified protestor who briefly stood down the advancing army, as a means to better understanding her past. Jin juxtaposes pedantic summaries of the historical events with awkward episodes devoted to Lulu's personal life, such as her attempts to navigate unwanted advances from her adviser and a burgeoning love affair with a fellow student. There are pieces of a great novel here, but they don't hang together. Agent: Lane Zachary, Massie & McQuilkin. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Chinese scholar examines the buried history of the Tiananmen Square Massacre of 1989. In something of a roman à clef, Jin scrutinizes the historical amnesia that surrounds the pro-democracy student demonstrations that shook China in the spring of 1989. His story begins nearly 20 years later at Harvard, where a Hong Kong exile, Liu Lan, greets an official delegation from the PRC with a sign denouncing the killings. Growls one Chinese student to her, "I lived in Beijing for many years and never heard of the Tiananmen Square Massacre. Look around, see who believes you and your nonsense." But, intrigued, another young undergraduate student, Pei Lulu, begins to look into the matter, in time deciding to make the massacre the subject of her doctoral dissertation in history. Her fellow Chinese students don't want to know, while an older professor assures Lulu that the events were very real, saying, "Oblivion and stupidity always go hand in hand. A historian's job is to present the past truthfully and make others see it clearly." The author blends a bit of academic intrigue into his story, with one lecherous senior professor--almost a stock character, that--attempting to suppress Lulu's research in order to gain favor with the PRC government. That element of the novel isn't as involving as Lulu's experiences on the ground in her homeland: Her mother and father, both of whom took part in the demonstrations, are alternately fearful but encouraging, while the secret police keep a close eye out on her; one agent, burning the photo of the famed Tank Man who gives the book its title, warns sternly that she may well be "handled as a criminal and get a prison term or be shut up in a mental asylum." A skillfully charged blend of history, politics, and storytelling that revisits a moment that many wish were forgotten. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.