Sky Burial
Xinran
In the early 1960s a rumour circulated through China
that one of its soldiers in Tibet had been brutally fed to vultures. Xinran
was a little girl: the tale frightened and fascinated her. Thirty years
later, she met a Chinese woman who could tell her the astonishing story that
lay behind the legend. Her name was Shuwen and she had spent most of her
adult life lost on the Tibetan plateau. . .
In 1958, Shuwen was twenty-six. She and her
husband Kejun were young medical students, fired with the hope and
enthusiasm of the early Communist years. It was this idealism that led Kejun
to join the army as a doctor. But only a few months after her marriage,
Shuwen heard that her husband had been killed in action in Tibet. Refusing
to believe the news, she too joined up as a doctor and set out for Tibet in
search of him. She entered a landscape that nothing had prepared her for -
the silence, the altitude, the emptiness were terrifying. But Shuwen's
determination to find Kejun drove her on. It would drive her when she became
separated from her regiment, and when she was lost in the mountains of north
Tibet. It would drive her through long years of wandering in an alien and
confusing culture. Thirty years later it would lead her to discover the
truth about what happened to her husband...
More details about this book can be found at:
http://www.randomhouse.co.uk/xinran/sky_burial/ |