This novel gives a first-person perspective of adolescence in Shanghai in the 1950s and 60s, a time of upheaval and daily drama in the live of even the most ordinary of people. Through the perspective of our young narrator, we can observe the social reality of the time, impacted by the enormous tide of political changes.
We follow our narrator as he navigates the difficulties anyone might face in growing up: shifting loyalties among friends, conflicts with teacher and other significant adults in his life, and an array of family troubles. His single mother is raising him with the help of his grandparents, together struggling to keep this poor family afloat while adhering to their moral code. Always lurking in the background is his now deceased father, once a member of the military police, who was divorced from his mother twice.
Against this backdrop of normal domestic drama is the turbulent political situation of that time. All over China, urban youth were being transferred to the countryside, and our narrator shares this fate. We follow him as he prepares for this monumental change, having been informed that he would go to a farm on Chongming, a rural island north of Shanghai.
Among the novel's carefully drawn characters--the friends, family and neighbors of the narrator--is the city itself, as the author depicts the culture and customs unique to Shanghai.
Through his striking picture of a normal young man, the author has captured the lives of many unknown and unremembered people whose destinies were influenced by political movements. This novel represents the memory of the youth of a generation.
About the Author: Shen Shanzeng (b. 1950) is a professional writer and director, and serves as Deputy Director of the Fiction Committee at the Shanghai Writers Association. In addition to the novel Normal People, his publications include the literary notes, Shanghai Natives, and When the Muse Extends Her Goldfinger, a novel embedding economic theories. Since the late 1990s, he has turned his attention to Chinese classics, producing a series of his own interpretations including Give Me Back Zhuangzi and Give Me Back Laozi.