Mr. Muos Travelling Couch, Dai Sijie
Mr. Muos Travelling Couch, Dai Sijie
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Mr. Muo's Travelling Couch

Author: Dai Sijie

Narrator: B.D. Wong

Unabridged: 7 hr 53 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/07/2005


Synopsis

Following his runaway best seller, Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress, Dai Sijie gives us a delightful new tale of East meets West: an adventure both wry and uplifting about a love of dreams and the dream of love, and the power of reading to sustain and inspire the spirit.

After years of studying Freud in Paris, Mr. Muo returns home to introduce the blessings of psychoanalysis to twenty-first-century China. But it is his hidden purpose—to liberate his university sweetheart, now a political prisoner—that leads him to the sadistic local magistrate, Judge Di. The price of the Communist bureaucrat’s clemency? A virgin maiden. And so our middle-aged hero Muo, a Westernized romantic and sexual innocent himself, sets off on his bicycle in search of a suitable girl.

Muo’s quest will take him from a Chengdu mortuary to a rural panda habitat, from an insane asylum to the haunts of the marauding Lolo people. Along the way, he will lose a tooth, his virginity, and his once unshakable faith in psychoanalytic insight. But his quixotic idealism will not waver, even as he comes to see that the chivalrous heart may have room for more than one true love.

Dai Sijie’s exuberant, touching—and most unlikely—romance is a triumph of unbridled imagination, a celebration of the yearning spirit.

About The Author

Dai Sijie is a Chinese-born filmmaker and novelist who has lived and worked in France since 1984. His first novel, Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress, was an overnight sensation; it spent twenty-three weeks on the New York Times best-seller list.


Reviews

AudiobooksNow review by D THOMAS on 2007-12-17 16:39:42

This was a very interesting book with insights into the mind of the Chinese psychoanalyst. The interplay of Freud with the personal and cultural issues in China was funny and insightful.

Goodreads review by Sinem A. on April 23, 2020

Dai Sijie ile tanışmam tamamen tesadüf. harika bir tesafüf oldu çünkü yepyeni keşiflerin kapısını açmış oldum böylece... Aslında kitap yazarın deneyimlerinin birikimlerinin inanılmaz bir yeniden derlenip kurgulanmasından oluşuyor.yazar çinde doğup büyümüş maocu bir eğitimden geçip fransaya yelken aç......more

Goodreads review by Mazola1 on June 21, 2008

This book is a surrealistic trip through China told by a most improbable protagonist. Muo, a Chinese psychoanalyst trained in France, takes a bizzare trip across China looking for a virgin to sate the jaded appetite of a sadistic judge, a former executioner of Chinese prisoners who took an unseemly......more

Dai Sijie's first book is a lovely lyrical entrance into the China of a fine story teller. This, his second novel for all its fine points was a disappointment. Mr Muo's, traveling Couch is a modern retelling of Don Quixote. In case you miss the point, you are twice told that Cervantes is the inspirat......more

Goodreads review by Sarah on October 17, 2009

I have a bit of a conundrum with this book. I love the author’s style of writing...there’s something lyrical about the structure of his sentences that just engulf the reader. Balzac and the Little Chinese seamstress hypnotized me with some of its passages. That being said, Mr. Muo’s Traveling Couch......more

Goodreads review by Stacie on November 06, 2008

* Originally published in France as Le complexe de Di by Gallimard, Paris, in 2003. I’ve truly grown to love Asian writers. This writer happens to be Chinese-born but lives and works in France. Either way, the culture and wit of Asia and its artists have overwhelmed and enthralled me. Mr. Muo’s Trave......more


Quotes

"Fans of Dai Sijie's Balzac will adore this enchanting adventure story." —Chicago Tribune“Always entertaining. . . . A bawdy, comic romp [that] takes our hero into all kinds of wild scrapes and adventures.” —San Francisco Chronicle"Poignant. . . . Hilarious. . . . A fascinating book." —San Jose Mercury News