Cinema Love, Jiaming Tang
Cinema Love, Jiaming Tang
List: $20.00 | Sale: $14.00
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Cinema Love

Author: Jiaming Tang

Narrator: Samantha Tan

Unabridged: 9 hr 39 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 05/07/2024


Synopsis

Winner of the Los Angeles Times' Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction
Winner of the Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction
Winner of the Ferro-Grumley award for LGBTQ Fiction
Finalist for the 2025 Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction
Finalist for the Lambda Literary Award
Finalist for the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award

A Dakota Johnson x TeaTime Book Club Pick

“Part ghost story, part love story, and part tale of hardscrabble immigrant life.” —The New Yorker

A staggering epic about men and women who find themselves in forbidden relationships, the weight of secrets, and the persistence of memory.

Spanning decades, from post-socialist China to contemporary New York, Cinema Love is a tour de force about gay men and the women who marry them.

Thirty years ago, in rural Fuzhou, Old Second and his wife Bao Mei frequented the Workers’ Cinema: a rundown theater where gay men cruised for love. While classic war films played, Old Second found intimacy with closeted men in the screening rooms. In the box office, Bao Mei sold movie tickets, guarding the secrets of the cinema and even finding her own happiness with the projectionist. But once Old Second’s passionate affair with his male lover was exposed, a series of haunting events unfolded, propelling these characters toward an uncertain future in America.

A tender novel of love, care, and survival, Cinema Love announces Jiaming Tang as a major new talent.

About The Author

Jiaming Tang is the author of Cinema Love, winner of the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Prize for First Fiction; the Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction; and the Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBTQ Fiction. It was also a finalist for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction. He was a 2022-23 Center for Fiction Emerging Writer Fellow, and his work appears in AGNI, Jezebel, Joyland, and elsewhere.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Paul on August 23, 2024

The book follows the lives of gay men and the women who loved and married them. It has several parts with the first one focusing on closeted men in China visiting old cinemas where illicit love was available and how they married to further hide themselves. The story then moves to America and immigra......more

Goodreads review by tia ❀ on October 05, 2023

Right off the bat, you can tell that Tang’s writing in Cinema Love is exceptional. I can’t even start to tell you how many quotes I have underlined from this book. The writing itself is searing - the story of Yan Hua, Old Second, and Bao Mei (among other characters I hold very dear to my heart) is s......more

Goodreads review by Vito on June 20, 2024

Jiaming Tang’s debut novel, “Cinema Love” will stay with you long after you finish — its pages filled with tender, heart-wrenching stories of gay men and the women who loved and married them. We start in China, following a man named Old Second who after being discovered to be queer is thrown out and......more

Goodreads review by Queralt✨ on August 28, 2024

A few weeks ago I read an academic paper about people in the asexual spectrum getting married to ‘cope’ living in China. I don’t think there are books about that topic, but I happened to find Cinema Love available and I was instantly intrigued. As the blurb summarizes, Cinema Love is about “gay men......more

Goodreads review by Cody | CodysBookshelf on January 13, 2024

Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the early review copy! I’ve seen Cinema Love often described in reviews as ‘soft’ and ‘tender’ and I would agree - it feels delicate. It’s ornate crystal that could easily shatter. But it has a lot of power, hidden power, and the end result is a smart and to......more


Quotes

Most Anticipated by Read Between the Spines, Book Riot, LGBTQ Reads, Debutiful, SheKnows, and Write or Die

A Library Journal Editors' Pick


“Moving…Part ghost story, part love story, and part tale of hardscrabble immigrant life, this intricately plotted novel asks whether, in the end, it is better to forgive or to forget.” The New Yorker

“This tender, elegant debut follows gay men and their wives from pickups at a 1980s Mawei movie theater to loss and longing in NYC’s Chinatown.” Vanity Fair

Cinema Love is a gripping narrative with sharply drawn characters . . . A beautiful meditation on love, loss, and the haunting power of the past.” New York Journal of Books

“There is much to admire in this intricately plotted novel. The depiction of Chinese immigrant life in America is very well done: rich in detail, and with lovely flashes of humour . . . And it’s a story with real heart: Tang shows genuine sympathy for each of his flawed characters as he carefully unpicks the moral complexities of their choices.”The Guardian

"The pages crackle with the tension of a Hollywood thriller. There are elements here of Ian McEwan’s Atonement and Tom Crewe’s The New Life... an enticing, engaging read." The Times

“An ambitious and promising debut . . . Tang succeeds in making the story land with the ‘urgency of a bullet wound.’” Irish Times

“This is a unique and compelling debut novel about the ways the past haunts the present and the intertwined suffering and joy of queer people and those who love them.” AudioFile Magazine

“Resonant and textured... Tang announces himself as a writer to watch with this unshakable novel.” Publishers Weekly *starred*

“A haunting story of shared pasts and troubled memories.” Kirkus *starred*

“Rich in simile and metaphor, Tang's book is beautifully written too (things happen 'with the urgency of a bullet wound,' a city grows 'like a tumor'). An excellent first novel and a captivating reading experience.” Booklist *starred*

“Exceptional, moving, and not to be missed.”—Alice Hoffman

“So queer and so Chinese. So heartbreaking yet often hilarious, this is the best debut novel I've read in ages. There are some exquisitely sexy moments, too, in this tale spanning two countries, four decades, endless conflicting desires, and one sweaty cinema. Tang's work reminds me of the sacred power of a favorite auntie's gossip. Or the song, the terrible song of a scorned lover's confessions. In this book, Tang is more than a novelist or a fiction writer—he is a true storyteller.”—Chen Chen, poet and author of Your Emergency Contact Has Experienced an Emergency

"Gentle and fierce, heartbreaking without sacrificing its sense of humor, Jiaming Tang’s Cinema Love perfectly mines the difficult-to-reach space between agony and pleasure. I have never read anything like it, but my most secret parts have always longed to know the hidden truths it reveals. Guided through these shadowy and sorrowful places by Tang’s plush and vivid prose, I found myself breathless until the very end—and even then barely able to exhale. This is the unforgettable work of a patient master." —Robert Jones, Jr., author of The New York Times bestseller and National Book Award finalist The Prophets

"Lush, romantic, daring, and filled with indelible characters, Cinema Love is not just an extraordinary debut, but a future classic. In this story of forbidden queer love and the cost of secrets, Jiaming Tang gives voice, humanity, and dignity to people so often rendered invisible by society. Here, Chinese laborers, factory workers, seamstresses, nail technicians, and cooks take glorious center stage, their lives and deepest yearnings made epic. I absolutely loved this book and couldn’t stop reading."—Jessamine Chan, New York Times bestselling author of The School for Good Mothers

"Cinema Love grasps you tightly in the heart, then does not let go. A tender and enrapturing feat of storytelling, this novel unwraps the brightest and darkest moments of queer love and all its humanity. The stories of the men and women in this book swallowed me whole, and I will never forget them."—Vanessa Chan, national bestselling author of The Storm We Made

“A beautifully told story about the delicate tension between love and longing, the crisis of loneliness, and the price of regret. With a wise, masterful compassion, Cinema Love announces Jiaming Tang as an essential new voice in literature. I absolutely loved this book.” —Emily Habeck, author of Shark Heart

"Masterful... Cinema Love is a tender, deeply compassionate debut, with characters so vividly drawn they feel alive." —Grace D. Li, New York Times bestselling author of Portrait of a Thief

“A testimony to the power of humanity and queer love, Cinema Love brings to life characters and places that literature is missing, and that readers will never forget.” Qian Julie Wang, New York Times bestselling author of Beautiful Country

“Gracefully crisscrossing China and New York City's Chinatown, Cinema Love lays bare that which so many of us feel: the struggle against loneliness, attempts to forge a life beyond betrayals large and small, and the fact that liberation for some means loss for others. Featuring characters full of wit, humor, and longing, Jiaming Tang's debut navigates the complexities of intimacy with the utmost care, while also affirming that in order to build a better future, we must first make peace with the past. Hear me now: this is a book that'll stay with you long after the last page.” —Mateo Askaripour, New York Times bestselling author of Black Buck and This Great Hemisphere

"A staggering feat of storytelling, epic in its reach yet so intimate and nuanced in its ability to break the heart of its reader. Tang honours the many stripes of his characters' journeys with forensic clarity, compassion and authenticity."—Wiz Wharton, author of Ghost Girl, Banana

“I loved it. Cinema Love fizzes with energy. The characters are rich and warm and the prose is perfect. Jiaming Tang is a remarkable new voice.”—Fiona Mozley, author of Elmet and Hot Stew