There’s Nothing I Can Do When I Think of You Late at Night

Cao Naiqian. Translated by John Balcom

Columbia University Press

There’s Nothing I Can Do When I Think of You Late at Night

Pub Date: May 2009

ISBN: 9780231148108

248 Pages

Format: Hardcover

List Price: $40.00£35.00

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Pub Date: May 2009

ISBN: 9780231519731

248 Pages

Format: E-book

List Price: $39.99£35.00

There’s Nothing I Can Do When I Think of You Late at Night

Cao Naiqian. Translated by John Balcom

Columbia University Press

Set among a remote cluster of cave dwellings in Shanxi province, There's Nothing I Can Do When I Think of You Late at Night is a genre-defying exposé of rural communism. In a series of vivid, interlocking vignettes, several narrators speak of adultery, bestiality, incest, and vice, revealing the consequences of desire in a world of necessity.

The Wen Clan Caves are based on an isolated village where the author, Cao Naiqian, lived during the Cultural Revolution. The land is hard and unforgiving and the people suffer in poverty and ignorance. Through the individual perspectives of the Wen Clan denizens, a complete portrait of village life takes shape. Dark yet lyrical, Cao's snapshots range from pastoral stories of childhood innocence to shocking accounts of brutality and terror. His work echoes William Faulkner's Go Down, Moses and Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio, yet the author's depictions of elemental passions and regional mores make the book entirely his own.

Celebrated for its economy of expression, flashes of humor, and an emphasis on understatement rarely found in Chinese fiction, There's Nothing I Can Do When I Think of You Late at Night is an excellent introduction to the power and craft of Cao Naiqian. His vivid personalities and unflinching realism herald the haunting work of an original literary force.
Cao examines the often barbaric side of human nature in the face of stark poverty and extreme necessity. Publishers Weekly
Introduction: The Austere Lyricism of Cao Naiqian, by John Balcom
The In-law
Women
Leng Er's Madness
In a Nest of Oat Straw
Uncle Pothook
Men
Thieves
Widow San
Dog
Party
Leng Er, Leng Er
Lucky Ox
Eating Cakes
Old Guiju
Danwa
Heinu and Her Andi
Sun-Drenched Nest
The Woman of the Zhu Household
Lucky Ox, Lucky Ox
Heavenly Sun
The Graveyard Shift
Dog, Dog
Chou Bang Herds Sheep
The Taste of Oat Flour
Wen Shan's Woman
Old Yinyin
Watching the Fields
Old Guiju and His White Neck
Flushing out Ground Squirrels
Corncob

Winner, 2010 Northern California Book Award for Translation of Fiction

About the Author

Cao Naiqian was born in Shanxi in 1949. Since 1972, he has worked as a police detective in the Public Security Bureau of Datong City, Shanxi. Cao Naiqian began writing in 1986 at the age of thirty-seven, and his works have been translated into several languages. They include The Loneliness of Buddha, The Last Village, and There's Nothing I Can Do When I Think of You Late at Night.John Balcom is associate professor and head of the Chinese program at the Graduate School of Translation and Interpretation, Monterey Institute of International Studies. He has translated twelve books, including Guo Songfen's Running Mother and Other Stories and Li Qiao's Wintry Night.