An Empty Room is the first book by the celebrated Chinese writer Mu
Xin to appear in English. A cycle of thirteen tenderly evocative stories
written while Mu Xin was living in exile, this collection is reminiscent
of the structural beauty of Hemingway's In Our Time and the imagistic
power of Kawabata's palm-of-the-hand stories. From the ordinary (a bus
accident) to the unusual (Buddhist halos) to the wise (Goethe, Lao Zi),
Mu Xin's wandering "I" interweaves plots with philosophical grace and
spiritual profundity. A small blue bowl becomes a symbol of vanishing
childhood; a painter in a race against fading memory scribbles notes in
an underground prison during the Cultural Revolution; an abandoned
temple room holds a dark mystery. An Empty Room is a soul-stirring
page turner, a Sebaldian reverie of passing time, loss, and humanity
regained.