Chi Li
Some of Chi's works were published more than 20 years ago, yet they are not
forgotten by readers. One can still find them in the marketplace. Literature
critics find it difficult to explain why Chi's works are capable of grasping
readers for years against the briskly changing societal picture that is China.
In an age when reading is not a fashionable habit any longer, people still
choose to take up reading, thanks to Chi's stories. And some of those who have
already abandoned reading printed publications turn back to books after they
happen to have a glance of Chi's works.
Chi Li: Simple Woman
Chi is an inborn writer. Her sharp observations of life and natural
narrations are outstanding among writers. Famous writer that she is, her life
and writing remain simple. Since Troubled Life, the story that brought
her fame, Chi has locked her pen on the lives of common people and those in the
so-called lower classes. Reading her novels is like appreciating a Yamato-e
painting of modern China. However, her stories do not stay at depicting simple
scenes, but enter into characters and dig out the essence of human nature.
Chi never denies writing is a job to make a living. She admits she is a
citizen who takes down what happens around her in her daily life. So readers
cannot find pretentious plots or specious writing skills, nor will one encounter
difficult words and complex jargon. She does exploit her amazing skills, but
they just seem to match her stories.
Chi Li: Tough Person
Chi is a tough person, too. If a hand were said to be beautifully
presentable, she would tell readers "the fingernails are full of dark dirt." Her
sharp eyes are visible even through words in the paper. Behind the seemingly
bitter description is her whole-hearted concern for the lives of the people she
has encountered. "How should we live our life?" Chi writes in her diary. "What
do we live upon? Loneliness or revelry, hardship or coziness, disparagement or
gloriesˇ Why and how do they have unavoidable impact on us? Where comes the
power to give up or acquire them? My dear friends, what can I turn to comfort
you and myself?"
In Chi's latest novel, Shout Out When You Feel High, the sex-implied
title has drawn sweeping controversy among readers. Chi just takes the criticism
with a grain of salt. "The criticism and comments all have the right to exist.
They are none of my business. Actually negative comments are better than
flattering compliments because listening to the former is like a vaccine
injection while being flattered is like taking nutrition. I feel cool when my
stories are criticized."
|