Mian Mian

Mian Mian (棉棉)
Native name 棉棉
Born Wang Shen
(1970-08-28) 28 August 1970
Occupation Writer
Language Chinese
Nationality Chinese
Literary movement Hooligan Literature
Notable works Candy
Children Daughter: Prudence

Mian Mian (Chinese: 棉棉; pinyin: mián mian, born August 28, 1970 in Shanghai) is a Chinese Post 70s Generation writer. She writes on China's once-taboo topics and she is a promoter of Shanghai's local music. Her publications have earned her the reputation as China's literary wild child.

Her first novel, (Candy), has been translated into English. Her other works include 每个好孩子都有糖吃 (Every good child deserves to eat candy), a collection of short stories. Her novel We Are Panic was made into a movie, Shanghai Panic (2001), in which she also acted one of the lead roles.

In late 2009, she sued Google after the company scanned her books for its online library. She demanded CN¥61,000 and a public apology. Google later removed the book from its library.[1] She appeared in the 2013 documentary Google and the World Brain.[2][3][4][5]

Bibliography

Translated works

References

  1. Google is sued by Chinese author Mian Mian (BBC)
  2. Debruge, Peter (February 4, 2013). "Review: 'Google and the World Brain'". Variety. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  3. "Author Mian Mian challenges China". BBC. BBC. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  4. "Fiction Book Review: Candy". Publisher's Weekly. Publisher's Weekly. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  5. "Nototious Writer, Forbidden Stories Read Excerpys from Candy". PBS. PBS. Retrieved 1 December 2016.



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