Unlike his contemporaries from the heady days of the Beijing Spring in
the late 1970s - most of whom have either retreated into a very private
poetry or stopped writing altogether - Yang Lian has gone on to forge a
mature and complex poetry whose themes are the search for a Yeatsian
mature wisdom, the accommodation of modernity within the ancient and
book-haunted Chinese tradition, and a rapprochement between the
literatures of East and West. His poems can be disturbing and strange,
haunted as they are by the eerie ordinariness of life and death. But in
the end it is a triumphant poetry, wholly engaged with the struggle to
be alert to life, wholly engaged in the daily renewal, the search for
that 'shore / where we see ourselves set sail'. All the poems are
presented in English and Chinese. Brian Holton also includes a
fascinating memoir on translating Yang Lian as well as one sequence
translated into Scots. Poetry Book Society Recommended Translation.