Li Bai Books
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A MUST For Poetry FansReview Date: 2001-05-04
A Tang Dynasty Dylan ThomasReview Date: 2002-08-11
TRULY THE MOST POWERFUL CHINESE POET OF THE LAST 1000 YEARSReview Date: 2000-05-23
Li Po is the real deal!Review Date: 1999-07-20


great workReview Date: 2007-11-30
fore of Western public. The translator deserves much credit for these
poems read as if they were originally written in English. He brings us
a big step closer to the music of an ancient and culturally distant
century. Some poems take a more metaphysical tone but never fail to be
touching and humane.
I love this book!Review Date: 2007-11-21
Eastern Shakespeare Review Date: 2007-11-08

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Great seminal workReview Date: 2008-02-05
I don't think so...Review Date: 2007-01-20
ATKINS FOR LIFE IS A MUST READReview Date: 2007-05-07
Long term low carbsReview Date: 2007-03-31
Back to the Tried & TrueReview Date: 2007-04-10

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Poetry with PerspectiveReview Date: 2002-04-08
Enjoyable, but not really memorableReview Date: 2000-12-01
The main weakenss in the book for me was that only Li Po really emerges as a character. The others who show up, either in the story of Li recounting his life while going into exile or in the story of Li's life, are poorly developed. Elegant works several poems by Li into the text, but I would have liked to see more.
It is worth noting that I have seen several translations of many of the poems here. I can't comment on the accuracy of Elegant's versions, but they are generally delightful, more enjoyable than other translations into English of the same poem.
I recommend it on the whole, for the charm of the story and of the poems translated in it, but I can't do so with great enthusiasm. A better novel with some similar material is 'Bridge of Birds' by Hughart.
Fun to Read and EntertainingReview Date: 2004-05-17
Reviewed by Randy Farnsworth, author of "A Stand Yet Taken".
As a longtime student of Chinese history, I was intrigued when I came across this book. Chinese history, particularly ancient China, has always fascinated me, and this novel didn't let me down. However, it started out a bit slow, and after 20 pages or so, I almost put it aside for something more interesting. The topic may not appear too exciting at first - the life story of a poet in eighth-century China - and it does have a slow start, but A Floating Life is actually a fun book and quite exciting at times.
Li Po is a real person, and has had a great influence even to this day. When my Chinese-born wife saw what I was reading, she immediately quoted some of Li Po's poetry and told me how he was always drunk. Simon Elegant takes some liberties with the story, but this is a novel after all, not a history book, so don't expect everything to be totally accurate.
The writing style is interesting: Simon Elegant uses present tense, third-person omniscience for the "present" time of the story, where Li Po is interacting with a young student who has agreed to write down the poet's story in return for instruction in the classic arts. Elegant then switches to past tense, first person limited viewpoint as Li Po relates his adventures. The reader is taken back and forth between the present and past and in a few places it's somewhat awkward, causing me to stop and figure out where in the timeline I was. But most of the transitions are smooth, and the present story fits in well with the past, especially as the two stories meet in the end.
As Elegant tries to convey a sense of setting and background, he describes with elegant (sorry :-) ) details the life, customs and culture of the time he is writing about. At first I thought he was really going overboard, just trying to show off his knowledge of the era with all the minute facts he could include, whether or not they added to the story. But the problem with my complaint is, they really do add to the story and hurl the reader back in time to Imperial China.
The book isn't perfect, though, as no book is, and if you're not into historical novels in general and Chinese history in particular, you may not find this too interesting. For example, Elegant spends a whole page or more just describing what the emperor served for dinner. I enjoyed reading that; it reminded me of some fancy banquets I attended while living in Asia. But some readers would just scan through that in an effort to get to the real story.
Also, I still don't see the need for any author to offend the reader with vulgar language. We all know that some people talk like that in real life, but we don't need to read it. It really adds absolutely nothing to the book and in reality, detracts from it. That said, however, I appreciate the fact that Elegant doesn't dwell too long on sex and violence. He lets us know that the world of Li Po was a violent place and briefly mentions some of the brutality, but doesn't disgust the reader with a play-by-play. Ditto on the sex scenes.
Lastly, I don't know if Elegant has downloaded a dictionary into his brain or what, but he sure uses some obscure language in places. I didn't mind that, but I had to keep a dictionary handy to look up some of the words.
Sublime melancholy, like a good bowl of HuangjiuReview Date: 2002-12-12
Li Po, or Li Bai as he is called in standard Mandarin, is one of those rare such characters in Chinese history, and Simon Elegant brings him convincingly to life, a man of flesh and blood and spirit.
I know little of Li Bai; here in China he is much memorialized but less remembered, so the tales in "Floating Life" are as much as I know about the mythology beyond the repute of the poems. I'm sure Elegant did his research, though, and it makes for an engaging tale.
The device of the acolyte/narrator is awkward at times, and the breaks away from Li Bai's voice cause the book's progression to stumble, but it does allow the tale to be told in first person and without overly rigorous chronology. Li Bai's tales, told through his perspective, witty and insightful, are what make the book.
And the book does justice to Li Bai's poetry and ethic. Reading it, one gets lost in the quiet moment, as if downing a bowl of warm Huangjiu in a boat on the West Lake at dusk. Simple, sublime. Li Bai did many things, and is enshrined in the catacombs of history, but what matters is that he knew how to be happy, how to live in the moment.
Good, not great.Review Date: 2000-06-28
Unfortunately, there is nothing awe-inspiring in Simon Elegant's capable, diverting book. Like another reviewer, I came to the work expecting something grand out of the subject. There is much to mine in the rich poetry of Li Po, and the poet just waits for some interpreter to bring him to the West as a flesh and bones human being. Ezra Pound did something toward that end in the several poems he wrote involving Li Po; Simon Elegant has chosen a different path in the same direction. But with Elegant I think its not enough. Too much adventure, not enough serious, ambitious literature--for me. Other readers will undoubtedly feel differently.
I read the book to try to approach Li Po himself, from an angle. I don't think it works that way. This is more like a good movie made about the poet...its watered down and concerned to tell its own amusing story.

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Simply put, Li Po was so good, that he was even thought of as god like. He and Tu Fu are thought of as the greatest eastern poets that have ever lived, and being that they both lived around 700 AD that is very high praise. His words are moving and deeply stirring, and though he lived in such an isolated area so very long ago, his words still have great meaning now, no matter where your from or what your culture.
Filled with Zen and philosophy, this book is a great way of spending the day.
"The birds have vanished from the sky, and now the last clouds slip away. We sit alone, the mountain and I, until only the mountain remains."
A great painter, that leaves you thinking. Get this book!