Winter Pasture, Li Juan
Winter Pasture, Li Juan
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Winter Pasture
One Woman's Journey with China's Kazakh Herders

Author: Li Juan

Narrator: Nancy Wu

Unabridged: 12 hr 25 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 08/10/2021


Synopsis

Li Juan and her mother own a small convenience store in the Altai Mountains in Northwestern China, where she writes about her life among grasslands and snowy peaks. To her neighbors' surprise, Li decides to join a family of Kazakh herders as they take their thirty boisterous camels, 500 sheep and over 100 cattle and horses to pasture for the winter. The so-called "winter pasture" occurs in a remote region that stretches from the Ulungur River to the Heavenly Mountains. As she journeys across the vast, seemingly endless sand dunes, she helps herd sheep, rides horses, chases after camels, builds an underground home using manure, gathers snow for water, and more. With a keen eye for the understated elegance of the natural world, and a healthy dose of self-deprecating humor, Li vividly captures both the extraordinary hardships and the ordinary preoccupations of the day-to-day of the men and women struggling to get by in this desolate landscape. Her companions include Cuma, the often drunk but mostly responsible father; his teenage daughter, Kama, who feels the burden of the world on her shoulders and dreams of going to college; his reticent wife, a paragon of decorum against all odds, who is simply known as "sister-in-law."


About Li Juan

Born in Xinjiang in 1979, Li Juan grew up in Sichuan Province. In her youth, she learned to sew and run a small convenience store with her mother, living in a town where nomads shopped. Later, she worked in a factory in the city of Urumqi. In 2003, she became a public servant until 2008 when she became a full time author. Her writing career began in 1999, as a columnist for newspapers like Southern Weekly and Hong Kong's Wenweipo.

Widely regarded as one of the best narrative nonfiction writers of her generation, Li Juan's writing has won several awards. Winter Pasture is considered to be her most popular and representative work.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Alesa

A Han Chinese woman in her 30's spends the winter with a group of Kazakh herders. This is her detailed memoir, a fascinating look at an almost-vanished way of life. This is an ethnography of a single family living in a burrow, dug into the sands in the desert of Western China. We get to know Cuma, th......more

Goodreads review by Kathy

This book was Li Juan’s first hand account, translated from the original Chinese, of her journey from the Ulungur River to the Heavenly Mountains, in the company of three nomadic herders. Li was a single woman, so her mother made the arrangements for a Kazakh man named Cuma to host her. Cuma owed he......more

Goodreads review by Celia

Li Juan spent minus-20-degree nights with nomadic herders in the Chinese steppes. You will be glad you are reading about this adventure, rather than experiencing it. The nomads live in yurts or burrows made from sheep dung. Their source of water is melted snow. Electricity is provided by solar batter......more

Goodreads review by Chantal

One of my favourite books of all time is 'Wolf Totem' by Jiang Rong (a partly autobiographical account of the author's time with herders in Inner Mongolia), so I jumped at the chance to review a book that I expected to be similar in a lot of ways, although of course, the herders of 'Winter Pasture'......more