Ba Jin's "Random Thoughts", a long memoir that caught like a fever among
readerships in the 1980s forits reflection on China's chaotic turmoil of
Cultural Revolution, has once again become a bestseller following the writer's
death on Monday.
Xidan Bookstore and Wangfujin Xinhua Bookstore, Beijing's two biggest
bookstores, have set aside special shelves for the book of one of China's most
acclaimed novelists, who died at the age of 101 in Shanghai.
Writers Press, which bought the copyrights of Ba Jin works, received many
phonecalls from around the country ordering the book.
"We planned to print 10,000 copies, now we have to work overtime to print
20,000 for market sales next Tuesday," said Dong Wen, a marketing director of
Writers Press.
Known for his criticism of traditional Chinese feudal society, Ba Jin spoke
his own mind on the 1966-1976 period of turmoil in "Random Thoughts" serialized
in a Hong Kong newspaper between 1978and 1986.
In the memoir, he calls for human dignity and human rights and for
self-examination, and asserts that "thinking independently" and "daring to speak
out the truth" have utility in avoiding another Cultural Revolution.
"The writing of Random Thoughts marks Ba Jin's moral resurrection. Chinese
scholars were then still hesitating and thesituation was changing and hard to
adapt to. Many preferred staying silent. But Ba Jin didn't. He chose to speak
out in his own voice," said Beijing scholar Li Hui.
Ba Jin was the pen name of Li Fugan, who was born into a well-off family in
the southwestern city of Chengdu in 1904. His main works include "Family",
"Spring", "Autumn", semi-auto biographical novels published in the
1930s.