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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mo_YanMo Yan - Wikipedia

    Guan Moye (simplified Chinese: 管谟业; traditional Chinese: 管謨業; pinyin: Guǎn Móyè; born 5 March 1955), better known by the pen name Mo Yan (⫽ m oʊ j ɛ n ⫽, Chinese: 莫言; pinyin: Mò Yán), is a Chinese novelist and short story writer.

  2. Mo Yan is a Chinese author who blends folk tales, history and the contemporary in his hallucinatory realism. He was born in 1956, worked as a cattle herder and a soldier, and wrote novels such as Red Sorghum and Life and Death are Wearing Me Out.

  3. Mo Yan (born March 5, 1955, Gaomi, Shandong province, China) is a Chinese novelist and short-story writer renowned for his imaginative and humanistic fiction, which became popular in the 1980s. Mo was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature.

  4. Feb 7, 2022 · Mo Yan (莫言), which literally means “nothing to say”, is the pseudonym for Guan Moye (管谟业), an affirmed writer and essayist known worldwide, especially for having won a Nobel prize for literature in 2012 thanks to his ability to merge popular stories, history and modernism with a strong hallucinatory realism.

  5. Mo Yan is a Chinese writer who was born in a peasant family and dropped out of school during the Cultural Revolution. He became a self-taught author who drew on his rural upbringing and his fascination with martial arts, medicine, and folklore to create his fictional world.

  6. Mo Yan (莫言) is a famous contemporary Chinese writer. In 2012, He became the country's first Nobel Literature Prize laureate. He took the second place in the 2012 Chinese Writers Rich List that was released on Nov. 29, 2012, having earned 21.5 million yuan ($3.45 million) in royalties.

  7. Oct 11, 2012 · Chinese writer Mo Yan won the Nobel Prize in literature on Thursday. The Swedish Academy, which selects the winners of the award, praised Mo's "hallucinatory realism," saying it "merges folk...

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