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The classic, award-winning novel, made famous by Steven Spielberg's film, tells of a young boy's struggle to survive World War II in China.Jim is separated from his parents in a world at war. To survive, he must find a strength greater than all the events that surround him.Shanghai, 1941 -- a city aflame from the fateful torch of Pearl Harbor. In streets full of chaos and corpses, a young British boy searches in vain for his parents. Imprisoned in a Japanese concentration camp, he is witness to the fierce white flash of Nagasaki, as the bomb bellows the end of the war...and the dawn of a blighted world.Ballard's enduring novel of war and deprivation, internment camps and death marches, and starvation and survival is an honest coming-of-age tale set in a world thrown utterly out of joint.… (more)
User reviews
And if that's the case, of course it's a war of all against all, and so Jim's keen evaluative eye and ability to identify with whoever is to his advantage to identify with at the moment is so natural. This book has really interesting things to say (for one) about traditional national stereotypes--Jim's attraction to the hawk-eyed Japanese, cruel and clean among the filth and maggots, and the way it fades before the casual irony and eye to an advantage of the Americans, backed by a billion horsepower in Flying Fortresses (and you are reminded that any national idea would have been as appealing as "America", if it had the circumstances to wax confident and strong in that America had; and I see also that the initial US involvement in Chine came in the 1840s to "protect the Chinese from the British operating in the condition of a monopoly" or similar); his ambivalent relationship with the best survivalist Boy's Own tradition of Britain, represented by Dr. Ransome; and the ultimate fear that the Chinese have it right, and that war of all against all is what's coming, and the cold-eyed and cynical will survive and win.
And, like, I guess this is gauche or whatever to be impressed, but Ballard lived through this. I mean that in both senses: he was there, and he survived. And the book's constant refrain is "Jim knew", and some of the things he knows are most dubious, but he can't afford the luxury of doubt--he needs solid intelligence on which to make life-sustaining decisions. And that bit at the end--it's only a throwaway line, but where Jim looks for his turtle, absurdly, because it is eaten or killed or at the very least miles away--but you're like "a kid needs a turtle. Otherwise all he has to relate to are shity colonist internees (and the colonial whites come out as bad here as they do in, say, The Seed and the Sower) and Japanese fighter pilots." But, oh hell, the fighter pilots are children too, twisted in just the same way. Our grandparents' generation wasn't especially brave for throwing themselves into the meat grinder, which people have been doing since time immemorial; they were brave for coming home and getting together a system that persevered without setting the world on fire (more or less) for 64 years and counting.
The book, of course, tells the story of a young English boy, the son of a diplomat stationed in Shanghai, who is separated from his parents in the confusion of the Japanese takeover of China after the Pearl Harbor bombing. The boy spends the rest of the war in a series of prison camps, learning along the way to fend for himself.
The film itself pays remarkably fealty to the novel, with the exception I suppose that the book takes things just a bit further, with young Jamie saying farewell to China and moving to England (a country both he and the young J. G. Ballard had never been to). I was delighted to learn afterward there was a sequel, finding a paperback copy of The Kindness of Women in that very same used bookshop, and it is to this day one of the best books I've ever read.
After that came the easy ones that can be found in most any bookstore: Rushing to Paradise, in which a group of idealistic environmentalists decide to create their own society on a tropical island with disastrous (and predictable) results; Crash (later made into a film by David Cronenberg) in which Ballard himself is the main character, who becomes strangely fixated on (and stimulated by) automobile crashes; and Concrete Jungle, a brilliant updating of Robinson Crusoe, in which a man's car veers off a heavily traveled highway and down into a ravine.
Some of his earlier works were more difficult to find. I bought High Rise on ebay, a horrific tale in which the somewhat laconic main character watches his condominium building turn into an adult and urban Lord of the Flies. Paperbacks of The Drowning World, The Burning World, and The Wind from Nowhere soon followed, and only then did I learn that Ballard's earliest work established him as one of the finest apocalyptic writers of his day.
I picked up book club editions of the short story collections Chronopolis and The Crystal World from my trusty used bookshop (The Crystal World has a wonderful Max Ernst dustjacket, enhancing the value of the first edition, should you be lucky enough to have one.)
The last Ballard I read was his collection of essays titled A User's Guide to the Millennium, in which he opines on topics as varied as Andy Warhol and the Marquis de Sade.
At any rate, there are still some Ballard's I have yet to absorb, and for that, I am grateful.
This is no light read with
Eventually imprisoned in a Japanese concentration camp, Jim adapts to a life of starvation and violence, surviving by scheming, stealing and knowing who to ingratiate himself to. The author does an excellent job of relating the conditions through the eyes of a child and how the sickness, death and violence kept all the prisoners on the brink of madness. As Jim ekes out a miserable existence with no parental guidance and little adult supervision, it becomes clear that the boy simply accepts that the inadequate food, arbitrary punishments and killings are part of his everyday life.
Although the book is based on the author’s own experiences, it is a work of fiction. Written in a simple yet compelling manner, the story is challenging and powerful. The author conveys the young boy’s thoughts and feelings in a realistic yet at times almost dreamlike style. This is a coming-of-age story that explores large issues and stirs the readers’ emotions.
I had seen the film years ago and really enjoyed it, and although I've had the book on my shelf for years, it's only now that I got round to reading it.
The boy in the story is a representation of Ballard himself-it is almost an autobiography while reading like a great war story.
Reading this book it was easy for me to see how these experiences as a young boy would inform the author's later dystopian novels that would make him famous. The dank and dreary paddy fields of war torn China are somewhat similar to the rampant boggy jungles of England in his 'The Drowned World' from the 60s.
In both stories groups of people are struggling to survive in a changed world.
Good one!
The coverline is a quote from The Guardian newspaper, calling it “The best British novel about the
The central character, Jim, is a young boy at the outbreak of the war, but spends nearly three years in a POW camp just outside Shanghai, separated from his parents. He learns how to survive and protect his skin, mainly by being ultra-helpful to his fellow prisoners, often to the point of annoyance, even if he doesn’t realise it.
Jim also retreats into his fantasy world, and daydreams of being a pilot in the future. He doesn’t care on whose side, just so long as he can get up in the air and truly be free. His most intense emotional experiences are always connected to the nearby airfield and its gleaming metal wonders.
This novel is highly autobiographical, and it’s amazing to see how knowledgeable Ballard is of his own dizzying interest in just about everything around him. Jim is relentlessly upbeat, even in the face of death and disease at every turn. He is perhaps too trusting, but he’s also brave in his attempts to converse with his prison guards.
Exquisitely written, and with intense detail of every scene, particularly the dead and the dying, this is a simply fantastic book. It truly puts the reader in Jim’s shoes, seeing everything around him destroyed, and his world turned upside down.
It’s this kind of literature, part novel and part history lesson, that makes me realise just how lucky we have it nowadays. I sit here on my sofa, typing on a laptop, with nary a fear in the world, and yet just one or two generations ago people lived through (and died during) terrible atrocities which we can’t even begin to comprehend nowadays.
This type of historical document, especially told through the eyes of a child, is important. It reminds us of how far we’ve come, and how far we’ve still got to go.
I'm trying really hard not to spoil the book for anyone who has not read it yet. I felt my mind completely engrossed in the book and I found myself day dreaming during the day and finding myself at Lunghua camp and realizing how grateful I should be that my meal is more than just rice and a sweet potato.
Would I say this book changed my life? Doubtful but it has made me more interested to read other books of the same nature, I want to go and read a book of someone who was in a concentration camp in Germany and then sit and compare what they had to go through, I would also be more interested now in reading more books of the pacific world war 2
Jim was a likeable enough
I struggled to concentrate on the book at times, and found myself easily distracted.
So when I read some of the reviews about this book, I became defensive.
I do not know to what extent the book is
It is a fine point, but one worth mentioning.
Other people seem to think that tale unrealistic. I cannot comment too much – I count myself amongst the lucky who have not spent time in a concentration camp. However if we look at the text we do find a protagonist who from the young age of 10 is constantly thinking about war. In the next part of the book he is 14. War as a presence has been around his life for half of it, and War as a very real thing has been his life for a little less than a third of it, through many of what people would call formulative years.
I can’t be sure, but I feel his actions could be justified.
Seen through the eyes of a young British lad (the author in his childhood) cruelty seems ever present, and at the same time - or perhaps because of
Yet, we see that the actual level of cruelty is rather more a cruelty of neglect, of the British; rather more sheer sadism, for the Chinese locals. The author regales us with the slow suffocation by a Japanese sergeant of a Chinese civilian; the sergeant winds coil after coil of telephone cable around the victim's chest.
The film of this book was excellent and very true to the book, I thought. Nevertheless, it is worth reading the book simply for the pleasure of reading Ballard's wonderful prose:
During the night the swimming pool had drained itself. Jim had never seen the tank empty, and he gazed with interest at the inclined floor. The once mysterious world of wavering blue lines, glimpsed through a cascade of bubbles, now lay exposed to the morning light.
- and here we can see the origin of Ballard's obsession with drained swimming pools that repeats over and over in his fiction. Not that I'm complaining; images are the stock of the writer's trade.
Empire of the Sun is the kind of book that one day I would like to be able to write. It's full of images so far removed from what we imagine as "normal" that the characters stand out in 3-D against a fever dream. If you've not read it, it is worth reading even if you've seen the movie.
Empire of the Sun describes my experiences in Shanghai, China,
The story that he goes on to tell is heart-rending, yet inspirational. As a boy, Jim grew up in the luxurious world of a British ex-pat in Shanghai. Then, on the same day as the bombing of Pearl Harbor, eleven-year-old Jim’s life shatters. Separated from his parents in the chaos of the Japanese takeover, Jim lives in the houses of the international district until he joins forces with Basie, a lowlife who admits to trying to sell Jim and yet becomes a father figure that teaches him how to survive in this new world. Eventually caught and sent to Lunghua concentration camp, Jim works the system as he was taught, but is also helped by a friendly fellow captive, Dr. Ransome. When the war ends, danger continues to lurk as Jim strives to find his parents.
Action-packed, heart-rending, and inspirational, the story makes for a page-turning read. Unfortunately, my enjoyment of the book was tainted by the knowledge that J.G. Ballard was never separated from his parents and sister and lived with them in Lunghua. The difference that this one fact makes is enormous. Although I can’t discount the vivid descriptions that Ballard gives of wartime Shanghai and Lunghua, neither can I believe them, as I am constantly wondering where the line between fact and fiction lies. Give me an autobiography or give me a historical novel loosely based on the author’s experiences, but please don’t try to pass one off as the other.
Note: contains some graphic violence.
The story opens when the protagonist, Jim, age eleven, is with his parents at an early Christmas event, just prior to Pearl Harbor.
Chinese refugees and beggars are
I thought this was an interesting comparison to the Bible story of the good Samaritan stopping by the road to help someone in distress. Here they were going to a Christmas party but didn't feel much of the charity of Christ.
That night the Japanese attack an American and British military vessel in the harbor and war begins for Shanghai.
Jim sees the war through his own eyes. He's very analytical and nonjudgmental.
He's separated from his parents and spends the next few months living at his parents and their friends vacant homes, until the food is used up.
Later he surrenders to the Japanese and spends most of the war at the Lunghua Interment Camp.
He sees the empire of the sun when the bomb explodes at Nagasaki.
As the war is coming to an end, the prisoners are moved from their camp to another at an old Olympic stadium. They are forced marched to this location and many die.
I enjoyed Jim's descriptions of life, the author's slow pace in telling the story as if this is what the life was like.
This book is written from the viewpoint of a teenage boy,Jim,interned in a prison camp just outside Shanghai during WWII along with other western foreign nationals. Jim goes from a spoilt and luxurious
This story invoked so many feelings, from anger and disgust to laughter and hope, there are occassional dream-like sections but never does the story stray from the teenage perspective. Which is probably it's greatest achievement. The fact that this book while not auto-biographical is based on real situations and the author's own experiences is all the more remarkable.
If I had one gripe is that the author, through Jim, appears to have such a poor opinion of the British and the Chinese yet very good ones of the Japanese and Americans did grate a little at times but this did not detract from a great read
The book is graphic and spares no details about how people die, but it wasn’t graphic to the point where I had to put it down. Halfway through reading this, I realized
Empire of the Sun not only has an accurate portrayal of how a teenage boy would act during internment, but also the thoughts that would run through his head. There are parts in the book which had me on the edge of my seat because I was sure the boy was about to die, but knew that it couldn’t happen logically since it’s a biography.
Ballard not only provides an exciting adventure story, but also great insight into the human condition. While I wouldn’t exactly call this an uplifting book, I did feel better after reading it. I feel the same way about it as I feel about Schindler’s List: I wouldn't call it enjoyable, but it's definitely something that people should read.
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