Earth Trilogy: Death of the Last Arcadian Village

Holding the Earth in Heart

Chronicles of an Era

Earth Trilogy

To the farthest edges of the world, to the deepest corners of the heart.

As a child raised in the bustling heart of Shanghai, I have always searched for my homeland—not among skyscrapers and luxury brands, but in the depths of my soul and the remote edges of the world. I believe it is a spiritual sanctuary for the lonely, where we can hear the whisper of our own breath.

The ancient deities who still sing of life and death in distant lands exist within the ceaseless wheel of time. They are a beam of light, a soaring hymn, a tear, a moment of bewilderment. They are the vast mountains and skies, the scorching sun and torrential rain, the interconnected waters of the earth, and the tranquil heart of childhood.

Death of the Last Arcadian Village

A Novel by Sun, Wei

This novel is based on the author’s anthropological interest. For the sake of this novel, Sun Wei spent several years living in remote areas in China to learn the local rituals, customs, religions and to collect epics, myths and legends.

Bored with life in the big city, An Ning packed up her stuff and came to a legendary remote village at “the edge of world” after a long and hard journey. There she witnessed a tragedy of how the whole Arcadian Village, known as the last “peach blossom land” in China, was completely wiped out in just one winter season.

Among the local residents braving the sudden devastation, she saw an epitome of the human world – the frustrated old King Jiang Long, the lovesick Cabbie Ah-Man, the Insane He who wore a suit looking for leftovers on the ground, Boss Jin who was the secret patron of the Insane, the immortal Sixth Aunt whose name had been actually forgotten by the God, the beautiful Maid Du Juan who matured overnight, the young Monk Gaily who was born with the ability to read other people’s minds and the old Priest Antony who lived in a comfortable illusion of paradise.

The eight characters represent the powers, the merchants, the employees, the mad, the children and the religious practitioners respectively, whose legendary stories help interpret the major desires and obsessions of human beings.

It wasn’t the flood, which came on the expected date though nobody believed it would have, that devastated the “peach blossom land”. Ever since the village was open to tourism, the simple happiness and the peace of the village had long been fraying around the edges before the doomsday. The village recorded in the Death of the Last Arcadian Village is real. At a time of globalization and economic integration, the withering of the village is that of many of the Chinese villages in the remote areas in microcosm.

By exploring the exit from ‘malaise’, the author believes that real wisdom and eternal elegance exist in the cultures of ancient times when people had good relationships with their souls and the generosity of Mother Nature rather than suffering from the wealth they have built.

Reviews

Sun Wei’s works are bold and immersive. Whether depicting urban emotional entanglements, workplace dramas, the enchanting customs of remote lands, or ecological concerns and philosophical quests, she navigates them all with grace, weaving a complex and unique artistic world.

—Wang Hongtu, Professor, Critic, and Novelist, Fudan University

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Beeindruckend und schockierend, Satz für Satz führt uns die Autorin ein eine Realität hinein, aus er es kein Entrinnen gibt.

— Michele Minelli,Autorin, Schweiz

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Since Silent Spring, women’s writing has increasingly addressed ecological crises, the fate of humanity, and the spiritual plight of modern people, embodying a maternal love for life and deeply moving reflections. Bestselling author Sun Wei’s Earth Trilogy demonstrates the vitality of Chinese women’s literature, captivating readers with its literary charm, leading them to the ends of the earth and the depths of the soul, exploring the poetry of dialogue between humanity and nature."

—Huang Lin, Poet and Feminist Scholar