Welcome to the MOSL Book Challenge


Showing posts with label ballet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ballet. Show all posts

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Tiny Pretty Things by Sona Charaipotra

Tiny Pretty Things (Tiny Pretty Things, #1)Tiny Pretty Things by Sona Charaipotra
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a dramatic and diverse story set in a cutthroat ballet world.

This is not a novel where you love all the characters. It's a story where you tolerate all the characters, while still finding their stories fascinating. You won't want to hang out with them or befriend them. This is the kind of story where you enjoy the ride but are happy the characters are stuck in the book and not part of your world.

Pages: 464

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Mao's Last Dancer by Li Cunxin

This very unusual autobiography tells the story of a young Chinese peasant boy who became a renowned ballet dancer for the Houston Ballet company.  Li Cunxin was born in the northern Chinese city of Qingdao, in 1961.  He eloquently tells the story of his early life, as the sixth son in his family.  Everyone in the village is poor and hungry, but his family works together to survive. China is under the control of Chairman Mao, and everyone is taught to follow his teachings without question.  Cunxin's life changes forever when a group of ballet teachers come to his village looking for candidates for Madame Mao's ballet school.  Cunxin  is selected for the ballet academy, and taken to a boarding school near Beijing to begin his relentless training.  At first, he is not very good, and barely passes the tests, but he persists because his parents have told him it is his only chance for a better life.  As training continues, he comes to love ballet and becomes highly motivated to excel in his art.  He  and another student are given the rare opportunity to visit the United States for a summer training with the Houston Ballet.  There, he finds that everything he has been told about the West and the United States was a lie; he also finds wonderful inspiration for his dancing.  On a second visit to the U.S., he takes the risky step of defecting, and begins to build his dance career with the Houston Ballet. 


Li has given us a very vivid picture of provincial life in Mao's China and his strong ties to his family. His writing, while awkward in places, gives a very authentic feel to the story, which often reads like fictional narrative.  While I have no affinity for ballet, this story really pulled me in.  Recommended for anyone who has an interest in China or ballet. 445 pages.