A Beast Slinks Towards Beijing
A Novel
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Narrated by:
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Carolyn Kang
LONGLISTED FOR THE 2026 WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION
A dark, magical realist debut family saga that moves through the Japanese occupation of Manchuria, the Cultural Revolution, and the present day to explore the effects of intergenerational trauma, the legacy of colonialism, and the inescapability of fate.
Narrated by Carolyn Kang.
Qianze has not seen her father in eleven years, since he walked out of her life the night of her fourteenth birthday and disappeared without a trace. But then she gets a call—there is a man on the porch of her childhood home, and he’s asking for her. This man isn’t the Ba Qianze remembers: he is much older, more fragile, and worst of all, haunted by a half-forgotten prophecy.
While Qianze wrestles with what she owes this near-stranger, Ba begins telling stories of his past. From his bloody days as a Red Guard during the Cultural Revolution to his mother’s youth under Japanese occupation, he circles around the prophecy he came to deliver. Qianze has always longed to know more about her family history, but as Ba reveals a past far darker than she could have imagined, she finds herself plagued by strange visions—fox spirits trail her on her evening commute, a terrifying jackalope stalks her nightmares, and the looming prophecy slinks ever closer.
Spanning decades and continents, A Beast Slinks Towards Beijing employs a combination of stunningly rendered folklore and atmospheric prose to examine the legacy of colonialism through the eyes of three generations. Alice Evelyn Yang’s debut novel is a story of family and forgiveness, of folklore and fate, that will leave you unsettled and undone.
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Narration was great EXCEPT the butchering of the pronunciation of the main character's name Qianze. The rest of the Mandarin pronunciation was great so this decision is absolutely baffling to me. This may be a non-issue to non-Mandarin speakers, but for me it felt like nails on chalkboard every time it was said, and considering this is a main character, it is said a LOT. I have already wasted too much time trying in vain to figure out why this was done and if there was any possible world where it made sense. Really unfortunate that this distracted so unnecessarily from the amazing story.
Stunning sucker punch of a novel
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