镜中

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Zephyr Press, May 13, 2025 - Poetry - 248 pages

Dark and dazzling experiments from a poet who died too young, but who wrote to "transform one's self and life."


This bilingual posthumous collection in Fiona Sze-Lorrain's inspired translation is a detailed, retrospective look at Zhang Zao, one of the more brilliant poetic minds from China of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. He moved to Germany in 1986. After returning briefly to China in 2004, he taught in Beijing as of 2007. These poems span Zhang Zao's short career, beginning with "Mirror," one of his earliest and best known works, and ending with "Lantern Town," written less than two months before his death in Germany at 47 in 2010. As Bei Dao writes in his afterword, Zhang "possessed both a thorough grasp of European literature and culture and an introspective understanding of the broad, profound Asian aesthetics: between the two philosophies, he sought a new tension and melting point." Mirror is his first book translated into English, bilingual in Chinese and English on facing pages.

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About the author (2025)

Zhang Zao 张枣 is a key literary figure of the "third generation" of Chinese contemporary poetry. Born in 1962 in Changsha, Hunan province, he rose to national fame as one of the "Five Sichuan Masters." Greatly admired by his peers for championing a complex yet harmonizing fusion of traditional writing and avant-garde flair in his work, and for his versatility in many foreign languages, Zhang was a recognized literary critic, translator, and scholar. In 1986, he moved to Germany. For several years, he served as poetry editor for the literary magazine Jintian and taught at the University of Tübingen. He returned briefly to China in 2005 to lecture at Henan University and the Minzu University of China. Zhang Zao died in Tübingen in 2010 at the age of 47.

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