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Where to Start with Mo Yan: A Reading Guide

Where to start with Mo Yan — whether to begin with Red Sorghum, Big Breasts and Wide Hips, or The Republic of Wine. A complete guide to the Chinese Nobel laureate.

By Clara Whitmore

Mo Yan (born Guan Moye, 1955) is the Chinese novelist who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2012, recognised for work that “with hallucinatory realism merges folk tales, history and the contemporary.” A native of Shandong province, Mo Yan draws directly on the landscape and history of northeast China — the Japanese occupation, the civil war, the Cultural Revolution, the reform era — and writes in a tradition that combines the encyclopedic scale of classical Chinese fiction, the magical realism of García Márquez and Faulkner (both acknowledged influences), and a grotesque excess that is distinctly his own. He is the most internationally prominent contemporary Chinese novelist, and the one whose work most directly engages with the violence and suffering of twentieth-century Chinese history.


Where to Start: Red Sorghum (1987)

The essential Mo Yan — and the novel that brought his work to international attention. The narrator’s grandmother, a young woman married off to a leper, flees with a bandit — the narrator’s grandfather — and they work a sorghum distillery in rural Shandong. The Japanese occupation arrives. The sorghum fields become a battlefield.

Mo Yan narrates backward and forward in time, from the present narrator to his grandparents’ stories, and the result is a kind of mythologised family chronicle that is also a war novel and also a celebration of the reckless vitality of a particular landscape and people. The sorghum is everywhere: red, fermented, used to make wine and to hide guerrillas, soaked in blood. The novel’s sensory immediacy — the smell of the distillery, the heat, the colour — is inseparable from its historical argument.

Zhang Yimou’s 1987 film (with Gong Li as the grandmother) won the Golden Bear at Berlin and is one of the great films of Chinese cinema; it is also a useful companion to the novel, compressing and visualising what Mo Yan renders through smell and taste and accumulated detail.


Big Breasts and Wide Hips (1995)

Mo Yan’s most ambitious novel — a century of Chinese history through a Shandong family’s women. His most sweeping work and his most explicit engagement with the full arc of modern Chinese history.


The Republic of Wine (1992)

Mo Yan’s most formally experimental novel — satire, cannibalism, and the grotesque machinery of corrupt officialdom. His darkest comedy.


Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out (2006)

A landlord is reincarnated through multiple animal lives to witness the transformation of Chinese society from 1950 to 2000. Mo Yan’s most inventive structural conceit; one of his most celebrated novels.


Reading Mo Yan

Begin with Red Sorghum — it is his most immediately compelling novel and the best introduction to his voice and method. Read Big Breasts and Wide Hips for his fullest historical canvas. The Republic of Wine is for readers who want his formal experimentation; Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out for his most inventive structure.


For the full Mo Yan bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Mo Yan author page on Editors Reads.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with Mo Yan?

Red Sorghum (Hong Gaoliang Jiazu, 1987) is the essential starting point — Mo Yan's breakthrough novel, narrated by a man recounting the lives of his grandparents during the Japanese occupation of China, set in the sorghum fields of Shandong province. The novel combines extraordinary sensory richness with historical violence; Zhang Yimou's 1987 film adaptation brought it international attention before the English translation, and it remains Mo Yan's most widely read work and the best introduction to his voice.

What is Big Breasts and Wide Hips about?

Big Breasts and Wide Hips (Fengru Feitun, 1995) is Mo Yan's most ambitious novel — a century of Chinese history seen through the life of a Shandong mother and her many children, tracing the Japanese occupation, the civil war, the Communist revolution, and the Cultural Revolution through the intimate catastrophes of a single family. Mo Yan's longest and most sweeping work; the title refers to the fertility goddess imagery central to the novel's argument about survival and endurance.

What is The Republic of Wine about?

The Republic of Wine (Jiuguo, 1992) is Mo Yan's most formally experimental novel — a satirical investigation of a fictional Chinese city where officials are accused of eating infant boys, narrated through alternating letters, detective reports, and embedded short stories. The most openly satirical of his major works; darker in its comedy than Red Sorghum and more technically complex.

Is Mo Yan controversial?

Mo Yan's 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature was controversial. His critics, including many Chinese dissident writers, argued that his refusal to openly confront censorship and his public support for the Chinese Communist Party disqualified him from the prize. His defenders, including the Swedish Academy, argued that his fiction is itself a form of profound subversion — that the grotesque excess and historical frankness of his novels constitutes a sustained critique of Chinese authority that operates through literary means rather than political statement. Both positions have merit.

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