A book of poems by Chinese writer and doctor Zhou Li, translated by Xi Nan. This is a personal book, a spiritual conversation with oneself, or short records of life and emotional fragments in the passage of time. You will see a man’s desires, love, confusion, puzzles in life, and even politics. The poems are sorrowful and despairing; fortunately, they are also very light. You can pick the book up at any time, open any page to start reading, and then put it down any time. Perhaps it can also be said that these poems are our “unbearable lightness of being.”
A book of poems by Chinese writer and doctor Zhou Li, translated by Xi Nan. This is a personal book, a spiritual conversation with oneself, or short records of life and emotional fragments in the passage of time. You will see a man’s desires, love, confusion, puzzles in life, and even politics. The poems are sorrowful and despairing; fortunately, they are also very light. You can pick the book up at any time, open any page to start reading, and then put it down any time. Perhaps it can also be said that these poems are our “unbearable lightness of being.”