> Skip to content
  • Published: 15 September 2007
  • ISBN: 9781400097296
  • Imprint: Crown
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 448
  • RRP: $55.00
Categories:

Brothers

A Novel




For readers of Ha Jin and David Mason, a mesmerizing story of the bond between two brothers, set against the backdrop of a tumultuous period in Chinese history.

At the height of China’s Cultural Revolution a powerful general fathered two sons. Tan was born to the general’s wife and into a life of comfort and luxury. His half brother, Shento, was born to the general’s mistress, who threw herself off a cliff in the mountains of Balan only moments after delivering her child. Growing up, each remained ignorant of the other’s existence. In Beijing, Tan enjoyed the best schools, the finest clothes, and the prettiest girls. Shento was raised on the mountainside by an old healer and his wife until their deaths landed him in an orphanage, where he was always hungry, alone, and frightened. Though on divergent roads, each brother is driven by a passionate desire—one to glorify his father, the other to seek revenge against him.

Separated by distance and opportunity, Tan and Shento follow the paths that lie before them, while unknowingly falling in love with the same woman and moving toward the explosive moment when their fates finally merge.

Brothers, by bestselling memoirist Da Chen, is a sprawling, dynamic family saga, complete with assassinations, love affairs, narrowly missed opportunities, and the ineluctable fulfillment of destiny.

  • Published: 15 September 2007
  • ISBN: 9781400097296
  • Imprint: Crown
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 448
  • RRP: $55.00
Categories:

About the author

Da Chen

Da Chen is also the author of Colours of the Mountain and China's Son. An accomplished flautist and brush calligrapher, he lives with his wife and two children in New York's Hudson Valley.

Also by Da Chen

See all

Praise for Brothers

"Complex and brilliant. This is magnificent fiction." --Washington Post Book World

"An epic novel that neatly distills modern Chinese history. . . . Chen's elegantly written novel ends on the promise of redemption and perhaps even reconciliation. . . . Successfully transports Chinese conventions into English to recount the agony of history." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Chen's inventive and sprawling family saga eloquently recreates a time of enormous upheaval." - Publishers Weekly

“Within this sweeping, ambitious, historical novel, there is a beautifully wrought story of young men coming of age, related to each other but strangers, and heading toward a breathtaking collision.” —Ron Nyswaner,author of Blue Days, Black Nights: A Memoir