
Owlish
A Novel
Author: Dorothy Tse, Natascha Bruce
Narrator: Greg Chun
Unabridged: 6 hr 25 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 11/28/2023
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction

Author: Dorothy Tse, Natascha Bruce
Narrator: Greg Chun
Unabridged: 6 hr 25 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 11/28/2023
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction
At half a century old, all Professor Q wanted was a love affair, a proper love affair, for once in his life. Now that he finally had the chance to put his desires into action, nothing should have been left standing in his way. But things had been happening in Nevers, among them one small, seemingly......more
An original, weird and thoughtprovoking political novel criticising China's takeover of Hongkong. Our main character, the strange Professor Q, starts an affair...with a mechanical doll... It started out very intriguingly and it's very well written (and translated), but as the story evolved I increasi......more
Publication date: June 6, 2023. There is much underlying symbolism that I did not fully understand, yet I was strongly drawn to its lyrical, mysterious tone and completed my reading in one sitting. Mid life crises, unfulfilled dreams, yearnings for something more, interspersed with guns, soldiers, p......more
2.5 (half a point for the lovely narration). I have a feeling that I'm missing a lot of metaphors in this novel. As a story it is bewildering, as a metaphor its even more confusing. Professor Q is having a mid-life crisis. His career and marriage are stagnant. His home country is in flux having been c......more
“This layered audiobook could be experienced as one man's midlife crisis.… Greg Chun's subtle performance encourages the listener to look beyond the dullard protagonist to what's happening around him.… This fantastical allegory is Tse's pointed commentary on her homeland of Hong Kong. Chun's deft portrayal of the broad characters doesn't detract from Tse's condemnation of her society. This textured production can be viewed as a story of one man's mistake or one nation's decline.” —AudioFile Magazine“Tse’s prose curls around Q like a vine, dropping him in landscapes that are equal parts Bosch and Freud, lush and deranged. Imagine an after-hours cut of Disney’s ‘Fantasia’; Alexander Portnoy on acid; a Losing Your Virginity theme park brought to you by Mephistopheles. . . . His vision of freedom remains private and acquisitive, whereas Tse suggests that real freedom—political, imaginative, and erotic—does not subjugate others; real freedom is democratic, a public and collective project.” —Katy Waldman, The New Yorker“A wonderfully imaginative fable that resonates with political critique and protest.” —Kirkus Reviews