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Beijing Bestsellers: Zhang Zhongxing's philosophy, a taste of Yu Hua, and more Dan BrownPosted by Joel Martinsen, March 20, 2006 8:21 PM
![]() Yu Hua signs Brothers Part II. This week's most talked-about book hasn't come out in print yet. Yu Hua, whose first part of the novel Brothers was a bestseller last summer, serialized several sections of the second part on his blog at Sina ahead of the novel's official release on Sunday. Yu Hua's been criticized for not spending enough time on his blog, and for throwing up older, previously published material to avoid letting it go entirely to seed. The appearance of three chapters of his new book lend credence to his earlier excuses that he was simply too busy working on his writing to blog. Apart from his personal blog, the second part of Brothers also appears in issues 2 and 3 of Harvest magazine, and it will be serialized on Sina's Book Channel. In answer to several questions posed by people commenting on his blog, Yu Hua said that the three chapters he posted were the most pleasant parts of the new volume; the fortunes of the main characters go rapidly downhill from there. Turning to popular books in print, we find familiar faces on the bestseller list. Net writer Annie Baby has Padma (#2), emoticon-happy Gwiyeoni has the third book in the Outsider series, and Dan Brown's Deception Point (#4) joins The Da Vinci Code, Angels and Demons, and Digital Fortress in a Chinese edition. The only other new title on the list this week is Peking Duck Restaurant (#8) by director Gu Rong. A copy of this book could not be found for this article, but it appears to be an adaptation of the 1990 film starring Chen Baoguo and Ge You that told the story of the Quanjude restaurant. The eclectic scholar Zhang Zhongxing has two books on the academic bestseller list this week. In a fortunate coincidence or an astonishingly rapid display of marketing opportunism, Zhang's works appeared on bookshelves in new editions shortly after he passed away in February. Sharp eyes will notice Qi Gong's calligraphy on the title of this and other volumes in the series (see Danwei's earlier article). The two books by Zhang on the academic list this week are Zen Outside of Zen (#3) and On Accordance with Nature (#4). The second one was conceived during the cultural revolution and worked on intermittently in the succeeding decades before being published in 1993. Kicking off from the first words of the Doctrine of the Mean: "The will of heaven is called 'nature.' Accordance with nature is called the 'way,'" On Accordance with Nature lays out Zhang's interpretation of how best to live. His day-job was working as an editor for the People's Education Press putting out textbooks and other educational materials. His own writings carried that same popular flavor (this reviewer recommends in particular his writings on wenyan). The academic bestseller list for the week of 03/10--03/16:
The overall bestseller list for the week of 03/10--03/16:
Bestseller rankings are taken from the Friday Book Review section in The Beijing News, which compiles its data from the city's major online and brick & mortar bookstores. Links and Sources
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