Rice by Su Tong

Rice: Su Tong a Book Review

Translated by Howard Goldblatt

Scribner, 2000.

Rice Su Tong

Rice by Su Tong is a book not to read if you are looking for something Jolly in the dark days of lockdown. It is however, a brilliant book.

Rice is a tale of hate. The author, Su Tong, searches deep into the human soul and what he discovers is not pleasant. Rice takes the ugliness of human nature to the extreme and beyond, and yet, despite horror upon horror, it’s a book that’s difficult to put down.

Rice: The story

On a superficial level the novel is a family drama set in Shanghai in the early 1930’s just prior to the Japanese invasion. Rice is the story of a young rice farmer, Five Dragons, who flees from a flood ridden and famine stricken countryside to the brutal and decadent Shanghai of the 1930’s.

His fortunes take a turn for the better when he finds work in the Feng family’s Great Swan Rice Emporium. Through a succession of intriguing events, Five Dragons becomes a member of the Feng family and heir to the emporium. From this moment the novel descends into an orgy of odium and vindictiveness, the like of which, is seldom depicted in writing.

The characters in the novel are impossible to like. Their fate is always linked to their own evil doings, thus leaving the reader with little sympathy when the inevitable comeuppance transpires. For in Rice, there is no redemption, there is no hero.

A novel that incorporates all the seven sins and could easily multiply them by three, Rice would make a fantastic TV series or even a film.

I would also highly recommend it for those wanting to know the darker side of 1930’s Shanghai from a Chinese perspective.

Su Tong is also the author of Raise the Red Lantern and Binu and the Great wall.

Binu And The Great wall

Binu And The Great Wall is a wonderful myth retold in the words of Su Tong, the author of ‘Rice‘.

Binu Su Tong
Binu Su Tong

The myth of Binu and how her tears washed away the Great Wall have been passed down through the ages in China. It is a tale of hardship, brutality and undying love. Su Tong’s version of the myth, brings to the reader the harshness and cruelty that led to the construction of the wall and the terrible effects it had on the common people.

The tale takes place during the reign of  Qin Shi Huang 秦始皇, the emperor better known for the Terracotta Army.

After reading Binu and The Great Wall it will be difficult to feel indifferent when you next stand on this immense monument to human suffering.

Binu and the Great Wall and its Relevance Today

It is curious to note that in recent years the Chinese Communist Party 中国共产党 has been trying to rehabilitate the image of the Emperor Qin Shi Huang 秦始皇 and portray him as some kind of national hero who unified China.

Territorial unification and the sinofication of all subjects living within the borders of China does seem to ring a bell with statements coming out of the current Chinese leadership.

It was under Emperor Qin Shi Huang 秦始皇’s reign that the Great Wall was built on such a massive scale in in such unhospitable terrain. For millennia in Chinese history, the name of Emperor Qin Shi Huang 秦始皇 was associated with cruelty, savagery and unbridled megalomaniacal ruthlessness and of having caused untold suffering to the population.

Re-inventing Emperor Qin Shi Huang 秦始皇 as a Chinese hero just goes to show that we live in interesting and maybe dangerous times!

Read Su Tong’s Binu and think about China today!