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Asia Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Asia
Batcats: The United States Air Force 553rd Reconnaissance Wing in Southeast Asia
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2003-11-10)
Author: Jack Sikora
List price: $15.95
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Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

BATCATS
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
Jack Sikora and Larry Westin provided an excellent story line as to the formation and operation of the 553rd Air Wing in its important role of air reconnaissance during the Vietnam conflict. A must read about this long safeguarded information on how the Air Wing served to support the ground effort across much of Southeast Asia.

Was a Batcat propman
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-12
The book has a lot of maps and pictures. A perspective leaning towards the flight crews but does have the page with the prop shop goof. Talks of the places we went off duty. I enjoyed the book and have read twice.

A Most Enjoyable Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-09
"Batcats" is an extremely well written book about the 553rd Reconnaissance Wing flying out of Korat RTAFB. The authors managed to capture both the essence of the combat and Thai experience in a very informative and entertaining manner. I was stationed at Korat for two and a half years and can vouch for the accuracy of their recollections. Thailand was and still is a very rewarding and unique experience, one that resides deep in the hearts of all veterans that served or visited during their tour in SEA. As I read the book, I was flooded with warm memories of a time long past. A time when all military members came together to ensure successful completion of the mission, and help each other adapt to the culture "shock" of SEA. Bonds were established that have weathered the test of time and formed a brotherhood of men that the authors were able to convey with amazing clarity. Both men humbly downplay the importance of their role in the success of the mission, but I can assure you that both were valuable assets and great patriots. This book is one of those that you love to read, and feel a sense of sadness as you realize you're almost finished with it. Definitely worth a second reading.

Batcat Veteran
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-01
When I heard that this book was going to be published, I was very eager to read it, and I was not disappointed. I served in the 553rd Reconnaissance Wing for a year and knew one of the authors; since then, I have been in touch with the other author.

This book focuses primarily on a brief history of the 553rd Wing during the Vietnam War but also includes a close look at Thai culture. Taking one without the other tends to give a narrow view of life at Korat Royal Thai Air Force Base, but the authors have done an excellent job in blending the two.

The mission of the 553rd was one of electronic surveillance and reconnaissance for a project that sometimes was referred to as "McNamara's Wall," a nickname for a program whose objective was to interdict the infiltration of personnel and supplies from North Vietnam into South Vietnam and Laos.

If you are interested in learning more about the electronic war effort from the Vietnam War and/or about Thai culture, religion, customs, etc., then I recommend this book.

Unknown aspect of the air war in Southeast Asia
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-15
A very interesting short read on the 553rd. Recon. Wing by members of the squadrons. Little has been written about the 'electronic' war in Vietnam, and their story is very much the beginning of modern combat.

Asia
The Battle for Jerusalem
Published in Paperback by I Books (2002-06-04)
Author: Mordechai Gur
List price: $14.00
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Average review score:

Har Ha-Bayit Beyadeinu
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
I totally agree with the other 5 star reviews.
Even without a background in military history, it felt like I was there myself. I have seldom read a less sentimental yet emotionally more touching book. Especially the final chapter, the actual conquest of the Old City and Temple Mount had me reach for the tissues. And that famous picture on the cover is just perfect.
It is true, knowing Jerusalem as a tourist does help, and this book takes you there again. I will remember what I read the next time I walk up to the Lions' Gate.
The only thing that bothered me slightly was the rather obvious lack of proper editing. Maybe in a future edition? The book is certainly worth it.
Oh, and a warning: I recommend this strictly to loyal friends of Israel!

Excellente narration militaire
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-17
Motta délivre une excellente narration minutée des opérations de sa brigade parachutiste. Mais le langage est très technique et ceux qui manquent de connaissances militaires peinreront parfois à suivre. Le livre manque surtout d'une introduction qui situe l'action de la brigade parachutiste au sein des forces du commandement centre et de cartes détaillées.

The battle for Jerusalem June 1967
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-24
Mordechai Gur was the commander of the Israeli forces in the battle for Jerusalem in the June 1967 Arab-Israeli war. His account of the war also relates part of the political background of the war, including the decision to take the Old City of Jerusalem only after Israel had been attacked by Jordanian forces. Gur gives a detailed account of the battle including the heroic struggle against the entrenched Jordanian forces in Ammunition Hill, and the dramatic taking of the Old City, the Western Wall and the Temple Mount. It was Gur who in the first rush of excitement electrified the people of Israel with his cry ' The Temple Mount is in our hands'. Gur was a strong, quiet soldier, a heroic person who served his country and people well in a distinguished military career. The taking of Jerusalem was the climax of that career and he tells the story in an accurate, and reliable way without great frills but with a deep and restrained feeling .

"The Temple Mount is ours !...."
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-10
Many readers will be familiar with Michael Oren's excellent recent work entitled `Six Days Of War' which relates to the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.

Perhaps the most significant event of that conflict was the actual battle for Jerusalem which saw Israel once again in control of the whole of Jerusalem, including east Jerusalem, the Temple Mount and the Western Wall. Areas so long occupied by Jordan.

Monumental events that have since held intense, international, political and religious significance. Even today Jerusalem is central to the Middle East 'peace process' and the stumbling block to virtually all negotations. The momentous events described here eventually resulting in Jerusalem going on to be officially declared as the eternal and indivisible capital of Israel during August 1980. A fact yet to be recognised by most of the international community.

Israeli Lt. General Mordechai Gur, the first to break through and reach the Temple Mount provides an excellent, firsthand account of the events leading up to, during, and following the 1967 battle for Jerusalem and the actual taking of the Temple Mount during the conflict.

This is a highly personal, intense account of the actual fighting. You feel as if you are there with the troops on the ground. Those familiar with the streets and environs of Jerusalem & the Old City will be even more so.

The progress of the actual battle against the well-armed and well-trained Jordanian forces is documented throughout and the momentous sentiment expressed towards the end when suddenly at the Western Wall is almost palpable.

An exceedingly well written, moving account which proceeds at a rapid pace hardly pausing for breath from once incident to another. Highly recommended.

What Real Battle Is Like
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-20
This is a very entertaining book about the desperate battle for Jerusalem during the Six Day War of 1967. The author was overall Israeli commander of this battle and his style of writing gives the reader a you-are-there feeling as the battle is planned and fought. If you like alot of action, you will enjoy this book. There is not a dull page. What I really appreciate about this narrative is the way it brings out the reality of combat. Seldom does anything go as planned. Mistakes are made and confusion is usually present. Among the bullets and bombs almost every human emotion is presented. War is terrible, but there is a time for glory.
Basically, the battle is in stages. Various strategic points must be taken by the Israelis from the Jordanians in a precise order. The reader is taken from one point to the next and is introduced to the major Israeli combat units and leaders in the process. A nice map of Jerusalem at the time of the battle is at the front of the book, so the reader can easily follow the flow of action.

Asia
Becoming Japanese: Colonial Taiwan and the Politics of Identity Formation
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (2001-06-18)
Author: Leo T. S. Ching
List price: $21.95
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Average review score:

Differences
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-13
The Taiwanese is once a part of Japanese,but now we are the Taiwanese,uneaqual to China. China is not eaqual to Japan,so how could China be eaqual to Taiwan? To say Taiwanese = Chinese is just China's excuse to occupy Taiwan,for China feel well-developed Taiwan is a BIG FAT SHEEP for them to eat.

Actually,I can say Chinese know nothing about Taiwanese traits and personailty. China would never be willing to understand it and communicate with us Taiwan,for Chinese is very self-focus arrogant people. So,to be nearset neighbor with China is the sadest fate for Taiwan. The book revealed the differences of Taiwanese and Chinese,focus on what is the life-experiecnce(historical)reasons of forming the "Taiwanese" identity. Readers can sense the logic a little from this book.

very good!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-29
I think it's a good book.It gave us(chinese,especially taiwanese) a lot of infromation about the history of taiwan,and the relationship between the japan and taiwan(china).It let us know more,it make us understand more.

Excellent text
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-09
A great book drawing on postcolonial and postmodern thought that analyzes Japanese colonial rhetoric about Taiwan as well as different stages of Taiwanese identity-formation under colonization. Includes an analysis of Japanese representations of aborigines, a group that is often glossed over or ignored in books on Taiwan.

Taiwanesness
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-13
This is a detailed account of the Taiwanese response to colonization under the Japanese. Liu adroitly illustrates the monumental changes afoot in Taiwan of the early 20th Century and builds a strong case to support the idea of a Taiwanese identity seperate from China. Liu follows the steps colonialization drive that can later be seen in the Chinese colonization under the KMT. At times the language bogs down in anthropological terms of art, but is no less a valueable addition to the pool of information available on Taiwan.

The nature of colonialism and its contemporary consequences.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-16
This study is an excellent examination of Japanese colonialism in Taiwan and its consequences for the contemporary formation of national identity. Through examining not only the particular circumstances of Japan in Taiwan but also the nature of colonialism in general, Ching shows how colonialism is a social transformation which produces people of mixed identities. He draws upon "The Orphan of Asia" by Wu Zhuo-Liu as an example of this understanding. Ching also sets forth an interesting critique of postmodernism's hesitancy to draw judgments across cultural boundaries. The "miracle" of postwar Japan, essentially an almost immediate turn from complete external orientation to complete internal orientation and subjectivity, was made possible by the United States' appropriation of Japan's colonies and Japan's immediate alliance with the U.S. in the Cold War. Because of these factors, Japan never had to go through the harsh but important process of decolonization, and Ching shows how this failure affects the identity crisis of Taiwan today. Ultimately the book is oriented around "the politics of identity formation" in which Taiwan must come to hold a national identity which embraces the diversity of elements (Japanese, Chinese, Taiwanese, Hakka, aboriginal, etc.) that have formed the ontology of Taiwan through history.

Asia
A Brief History of 1917: Russia's Year of Revolution (A Brief History)
Published in Paperback by Running Press (2005-01-10)
Author: Roy Bainton
List price: $13.95
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Average review score:

Very refreshing synthesis of a Russian year that shook the world
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
Roy Bainton is a British journalist. He wrote a short narrative history of the Russian revolution in 1917, an excellent introduction in a very fluid style. He focused on the experience of the people, great and small, who influenced or just lived through those momentous events (mostly in Saint-Petersburg, the capital city). 1917 was a year of great suffering for the Russian people. The " First revolution", in February, that put an end to the Old autocratic Empire, unleashed huge hopes for freedom. The October " coup" of the Bolscheviks, however, crushed these hopes for at least 70 years, and inaugurated unheard of barbarism in the name of ideology "for the good of the people".
Roy Bainton used a variety of "general" sources, but most importantly, because he meant to recreate the ambiance of the times, contemporary eyewitness accounts; he also traveled several times to Saint-Petersburg in 2000 to speak to people who either had been through the events (although at the time they were still very small children)or who told the author about their parents' experiences. That would not have been possible before the 1990's. This is the first book I read about the Russian revolution but I found its approach particularly refreshing.

Very informative and approachable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
I found the book informative and paced fairly quickly ... but I knew very little, so each and every tidbit was new to me. Not academic-y, which is a common trap to fall into for books like these. There were a few slow parts, but suprisingly readable overall.

Brief History of 1917
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-17
Roy Bainton is an outstanding writer and historian, the best. Excellent.

All you would wish to know about the Russian Revolution
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-04
Superbly researched and written in such a manner that the facts are easily digested and you might find it hard to put down. This is not dry history; Bainton provides the atmosphere to make it an exciting read.

Couldn't Have Been Written in the Soviet Union
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-09
This is the kind of book that might be produced in any free country about almost any incident of interest. It's the memories and personal recollections of a large group of people.

In the Soviet Union such recollections had to match the party line from the time of the revolution (1917) until recently. That makes this a breakthrough book. The number of people old enough to remember what they were doing that year is rapidly shrinking.

Mr. Bainton visited Russia several times seeking people to interview. He was successful in finding a great many people to talk to him. Most were original observers, some were telling stories that had been told to them by parents or earlier relatives.

It's a very enlightening book.

Asia
The Broken Fountain
Published in Hardcover by Columbia University Press (1989-04-15)
Author: Thomas Belmonte
List price: $76.00
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Average review score:

A Must-Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-21
Belmonte's book should be require reading for all Anthropology students as well as those interested in Naples life, before graduating college. As an ethnography, Belmonte writes an excellent detail account of life in poor Naples. He makes you "see" Naples through the eyes of the people in his book and not by those glossy travel brochures.

wowie...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-30
I have this book in a socialsience method class, and for that i am realy glad! This book is writen with such understanding, and such respect. He could have choosen an easy way and just written what he saw and assume about all he doesn't see or know. Like about the family he get's to know, he even mentions it himself, that he could have just assumed that all familys in Naples in this area and in other poor areas, are the same, and that the family structure and habits and behaviours are the same, but he doesn't, he tells you all he sees, and all he gets to know, and he tells you what he doesn't know, he uses other peoples work and what they have found to compleet his own. I undrestand why we have it on the book list!! cause it is so valid, he has done an amazing job. Also this book is so well writen that it's almost like a novel, i sometimes caught myself in forgetting that this has happend, its none fiction. This book is really worth a read! it's worth both your time and money... and the thoughts you might sit with after wards! Kudos To You MR. Belmonte, this is one WELL writen book, with insight, understading and truth.

Not just for Intro level Anthropology students....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-10
Belmontes field study of Urban poor of Naples Italy makes great reading. Belmonte writes as a chemist would, capturing the kind of graphic detail that puts you right at the head of a Neapolitan famly's table at Sunday dinner. Watch that knife! Belmonte's Naples is filled with unforgettable people in an unforgettable place.

Excellent, and enthralling
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-17
Thomas Belmonte brings the reader into the book. He doesn't simply write a sob story about those in Naples, yet he writes about the bare-truth and amazingly highlights the implications for the poverty. A must read for anyone who needs an understanding of unfair world systems.

Powerful summary of the way of naples poor
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-05
Thomas was my cousin. He was always an amazing person to be around. He died a few years ago from a disease called AIDS. He was a very brave man. He was not a man dying with AIDS, he was a man living with AIDS. Throughout his lifetime, Tommy was a very devoted man. He was a caring generous person. He is greatly missed.

Asia
Brother Enemy: The War After the War
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt (1986-11)
Author: Nayan Chanda
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Average review score:

Yankee come back.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-06
A fascinating account of the war after the war in Indo China.
Chanda gives us a wonderful review of the participants on the Vietnamese, Chinese, Cambodian, and American sides. When South Vietnam and Cambodia fell to the Communists in 1975, Americans in general and the government in particular closed the book on this awful period in American history. The Vietnamese were gulled into thinking that after their violations of the ceasefire, they were entitled to billions of dollars for rebuilding their shattered economy. Instead they got nothing and selected the Soviets as sponsers. This presented a problem to the Chinese who went to the Khymer Rouge as their proxy. As a result, war followed the war. Cambodia was shattered by first American bombing, then the Khymer Rouge terror and finally the war with Vietnam. Both the Chinese and Vietnamese wanted the Americans to come back and serve a role.
Nayan Chanda does an excellent and even handed job of presenting the views of all the participants. This is a wonderful book to read if you are interested in geopolitics. At 500 some odd pages, this book will take some time to read.

A classic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-07
This is the classic study of the chaotic relations in Indochina from the end of the American wars there in 1975 through the escalating hostility between China and Vietnam and Vietnam and Khmer Rouge Cambodia. It ends in 1985, in the middle of the Cambodian stalemate.
The presentation is vivid and the research is solid.

Brilliant
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-05
If you are interested in South East Asia, then get this book. Fascinating and revealing account of international involvement in Vietnam and Cambodia. Getting a little old now (could do with an update) but still highly recommended.

Fascinating like a thriller novel
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-08
While visiting Cambodia's wonderous Ankor, I picked up this book out of curiosity from the Central Market in PnomPenh. It is an amazing piece of historical reporting, thouroughly researched and extremely readable. The author puts together the pieces of the puzzle to explain the wars between Vietnam-Cambodia and Vietnam-China, after the American retreat in 1975. The rise and fall of the notorious, murderous Khmer Rouge, the flamboyant Prince Sihanouk, the struggles of the Vietnamese, Chinese power plays, all of this weaved into a thrilling book of history. This book opens my mind to realpolitik: diplomacy, military power, geopolitics, race, and history. Simply a great book which tells the truth with extraordinary balance and fascinating details.

The time in between
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-28
Most westerners know about the Vietnam War and, thanks to the movie The Killing Fields, the story of the Khmer Rouge. But very few of us have much of a clue what happened in Indochina between these events and the region's reopening to the west in the 90s.

Brother Enemy is a rich, compelling chronicle of the struggles that shaped the entire region, but primarily Cambodia and Vietnam, during that "in between time." It's a wonderful read because it manages to both detail the politics that shaped events while communicating how those events impacted real people. Nayan Chanda does this by weaving the experiences of individuals, including utterly common folk living day to day lives, into the larger story of regional power politics. It makes for great reading and a book that is both moving and informative. And, it's a great, page turner too.

Highly recommended.

Asia
The Buddha in the Jungle
Published in Paperback by University of Washington Press (2004-02)
Author: Kamala Tiyavanich
List price: $22.50
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Average review score:

Thai Buddhism in a Historical and Social Context
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-16
This is a book which I :
(i) looked forward to reading (after reading the favorable reviews),
(ii) wasn't sure about the quality of the book half-way through reading it, but
(iii) was convinced that it is an important book upon finishing the final chapter.
Broadly, it is a book about Thai Buddhism in a historical and cultural context. It attempts to relate what Thai Buddhism was like before state-led reformations (which began during the rule of King Mongkut, 1851-68) changed the institution. The story told is very subtle - it discusses, amongst others, the role that monks played in the local Thai society during this period. The method that the author employs is very peculiar - the book reads like a personal narrative that is sourced from personal interviews (with senior surviving monks), written recollections by monks as well as 'farang' diarists. This approach, which I thought was almost akin to an oral history is, I think, inevitable given the form and availability of the information on the subject. This approach also makes the book very readeable and appealing as it manages to impart to the reader the feeling of how the past feels like. Stories surrounding the sometimes supernatural feats of monks wandering in forests adds a 'folklore' dimension to Buddhism as practised by Thais that I think is not often conveyed. The stories about individual monks were the ones I enjoyed reading the most. I cared less about 'farang' writings even though their observations sometimes proved informative. Not all the book is centered around Thai Buddhism. For example, the author discusses views on the status of women in Thai society towards the end of the book (chapter 43). The book is partly a social commentary about how Thai Buddhism and society have changed. I sense a tinge of sadness about these changes but the author does not quite say it outright whether the past reforms were mistakes. This is quite understandable, given the sensitivity of the issue due to the exalted status and high esteem in which past and present Thai kings are held. One of my favourite chapter is the last one - the tale of a Dutchman who stole a jade Buddha statue from a forest, only to return it later and to ultimately find the true meaning of life (as a Buddhist monk). The last few words of this chapter (uttered by the Dutchman) was, for me, very memorable: "All our European haste and disquiet has fallen away from me. I have come to realize that quite equanimity is the highest good that we can achieve in this life". Tiyavanich certainly knows how to choose her words very well. This is a book which I read and savoured slowly - one to two chapters daily, every night, before I slid into pleasant dreams. Tonight, upon finishing the book, I lament the fact that I will need to find another good read tomorrow night.

Thai Buddhism in a Historical and Social Context
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-09
This is a book which I :
(i) looked forward to reading (after reading the favorable reviews),
(ii) wasn't sure about the quality of the book half-way through reading it, but
(iii) was convinced that it is an important book upon finishing the final chapter.
Broadly, it is a book about Thai Buddhism in a historical and cultural context. It attempts to relate what Thai Buddhism was like before state-led reformations (which began during the rule of King Mongkut, 1851-68) changed the institution. The story told is very subtle - it discusses, amongst others, the role that monks played in the local Thai society during this period. The method that the author employs is very peculiar - the book reads like a personal narrative that is sourced from personal interviews (with senior surviving monks), written recollections by monks as well as 'farang' diarists. This approach, which I thought was almost akin to an oral history is, I think, inevitable given the form and availability of the information on the subject. This approach also makes the book very readeable and appealing as it manages to impart to the reader the feeling of how the past feels like. Stories surrounding the sometimes supernatural feats of monks wandering in forests adds a 'folklore' dimension to Buddhism as practised by Thais that I think is not often conveyed. The stories about individual monks were the ones I enjoyed reading the most. I cared less about 'farang' writings even though their observations sometimes proved informative. Not all the book is centered around Thai Buddhism. For example, the author discusses views on the status of women in Thai society towards the end of the book (chapter 43). The book is partly a social commentary about how Thai Buddhism and society have changed. I sense a tinge of sadness about these changes but the author does not quite say it outright whether the past reforms were mistakes. This is quite understandable, given the sensitivity of the issue due to the exalted status and high esteem in which past and present Thai kings are held. One of my favourite chapter is the last one - the tale of a Dutchman who stole a jade Buddha statue from a forest, only to return it later and to ultimately find the true meaning of life (as a Buddhist monk). The last few words of this chapter (uttered by the Dutchman) was, for me, very memorable: "All our European haste and disquiet has fallen away from me. I have come to realize that quite equanimity is the highest good that we can achieve in this life". Tiyavanich certainly knows how to choose her words very well. This is a book which I read and savoured slowly - one to two chapters daily, every night, before I slid into pleasant dreams. Tonight, upon finishing the book, I lament the fact that I will need to find another good read tomorrow night.

Buddhist Life in Old Siam
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-24
This is a fascinating book for those interested in Buddhism or Thailand or just a good read. It is a wonderful collection of accounts of Thai monks in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Their encounters with ghosts, elephants and snakes, and all manner of people provide a slice of rural life in times past. The views of Westerners in Siam at the time provide additional perspectives. Old photographs, engravings, and maps complement the stories. Highly recommended.

Review of Buddha in the Jungle
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-15
...."I recommend this book to anyone who harbors one of more of the following persona: The historian who enjoys pouring over colonial memoirs which detail exotic places and scenes of west-meets-east-for-the-first time;the ethnographer tracking wisdom traditions as expressed in lifestyles of rural villagers; the armchair thrill-seeker who longs for hair-raising jungle adventures; and the spiritual aspirant hoping to meet realized practitioners who are the living embodiment of the Buddha's teachings."

Review of Buddha in the Jungle
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-11
Dr. Kamala Tiyavanich's latest book,"The Buddha in the Jungle," is a wonderful collection of fascinating tales, rich in the exotic beauty and mystery of 19th century Buddhist Thailand. From the horrors of the charnel grounds to the quiet serenity of tropical forest shrines, Dr. Tiyavanich's stories of Buddhist practioners and saints will captivate, inspire and teach the reader. A native of Thailand and a Buddhist practitioner in the Thai Theravada trdition, Dr. Tiyavanich writes in her characteristic style of detail and clarity, making this scholarly work fresh, exciting and easily accessible to every reader. I found this book to be a joy to read and I highly recommend it to anyone with an interest in Bhuddism.

Asia
The Caged Birds of Phnom Penh
Published in Hardcover by Holiday House (2001-03)
Author: Frederick Lipp
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Average review score:

SEE YOUR OWN DREAMS TAKE WING !!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-22
We have appreciated so much Ronald Himler's illustrations in "I Wonder as I Wander" (by Gwenyth Swain), and find a similar haunting quality in "The Caged Birds....." Here, his drawings of young Ary and the birds in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, add color & poignancy to a simple but profound tale of HOPE.

Both stories are served well by pictures that illuminate a child's anxieties, determination and hopefulness. Frederick Lipp draws us into his story of families trapped by poverty and living in polluted cities where they never see the beauties of the countryside. Young Ary dreams of her family moving from the city. She saves to buy a bird, clinging to the tradition that "letting a caged bird . . . a blessed bird . . . go free . . . makes wishes come true."

One day Ary studies carefully the birds before choosing one from the cage. She takes one great breath and then releases it as the bird takes wing with her dreams. The story of yearning for freedom is universal. Children will love not only the allure of another culture but also the author's gentle telling of one child's hopes following the light. Reviewer mcHAIKU suggests that reading this with children will encourage the sharing of dreams - - don't miss such a chance!

Green, Yellow, Blue, Strings of Blossoms
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-01
My husband and I have read this book numerous times to our 7 month old son and for our own pleasure. What a wonderful gift we received. Thank you. Outstanding story about work, wisdom and the future. Very inspirational for all ages. Artwork/illustrations are fabulous. Author and Illustrator harmonize beautifully.

Winged Hope
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-25
This book is for all ages- beautiful words, message and illustrations. The book takes place in Cambodia and opens us to the universal human themes of hope, love and dreams in the midst of despair and treachery. Read it and share it with others and "Fly with wishes on your wings."

The Caged Birds of Phnom Penh
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-26
This book will take you to a far away place that is filled with hopes and dreams. Simple wishes that mold a little girls world are realized through her desires and youthful determination. A book that can actually be enjoyed by all ages.

Inspiring story for all ages
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-24
I bought this story for my girls aged 3 and 6. They were moved by Ari's struggle and I found myself in tears by the joyful ending. I even hear them playing out the roles of Ari and the birdlady.The rich language and quiet beauty of the illustrations makes The Caged Birds a pleasure to read. Then it got even better. If you think Frederick Lipp is a good writer, he's an amazing speaker. He now lives in Portland, Maine and accepted an invitation to come speak to my Artists Books class about writing cultural children's stories. When he read his story the highschool group of 40 were completely silent. Then he engaged them in an amazing reflection on the importance of sharing the stories which move us. His presentation was honest, dynamic and he totally connected with even the most disconnected students in the class. The Cambodian student in my class was especially excited to connect with someone who had written about his homeland and walked the same streets as he did in Phnom Penh.

Get the book for your classroom and then see if you can't get him to come speak. Few kids books carry with them such richness of experience. This one is not to be missed.

Asia
China Alive In the Bitter Sea
Published in Paperback by Bantam Doubleday Dell (1983-05)
Author: Fox Butterfield
List price: $9.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Exceptional Insight That Helps Explain China Today
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-30
This is an exceptional book about what China was like as it emerged from the insanity of the Cultural Revolution. Fox Butterfield tells a compelling story about a China looking at the abyss. He helps you appreciate how amazing China's economic growth has been given where she was in 1980. His insight into the massive disillusionment that was born out of the Cultural Revolution also helps one understand why there are so many "quality" problems with food and products today.

Fox Butterfield has an exceptional eye for the little details that give you a sense of what is important to Chinese people in the 1980s. As you read his book, you not only learn about Chinese history, you also learn about Chinese cultural values. If you want to understand China today, you must read China: Alive in the Bitter Sea. It will move you, it will sadden you and it will teach you. What it won't do is bore you.

Facinating Slice of History
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
I agree with the other reviewers of this book: I just couldn't put it down. But what is REALLY interesting is that Mr Butterfield's college-age Canadian/Chinese assistant, Jan Wong, wrote her own book about ten years later in which she also shared her perspective on the years covered in this book AND covers "what happened next" (after Butterfield left) ... both books complement each other and are great reads!

Old, but insightful
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-12
Around twenty-three years old, and therefore completely out of date, 'China: Alive in the Bitter Sea' is nevertheless an amazing read and it is invaluable as an historical document. It's not China today; it's China yesterday. It's a great book to read in order to understand China's more recent modern history, as it affected those Chinese who make China today.

great book on china
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-14
Everyone who wants to really understand modern China should read this book. The author captured the political turmoil and tragedy of culture revolution, and the everyday Chinese life with many captivating human stories from all walks of Chinese society. The book was published in 1982. I wish the author could go back to China and write an update book on the changes in the last twenty years.

I also suggest reading Ayn Rand's Anthem together with this book

Valuable oral history of the Cultural Revolution
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-30
The magnitude of suffering that the Chinese have endured this century is truly inconceivable. This book helps one to relate to it through the stories of those Chinese that Mr. Butterfield was able to talk to, not too long after the Cultural Revolution ended. It really makes one think: How does such a period of mass cultural insanity happen? Is it just a result of economics and youthful demographics? Could it happen anywhere? Was it no different than the nazis or the Khmer Rouge or the Inquisition? Are we even in such a period now, and dont know it? Mr. Butterfield does a valuable service in preserving this record of human suffering and endurance.

Asia
China Live: Two Decades in the Heart of the Dragon
Published in Hardcover by Turner Pub (1997-04)
Author: Mike Chinoy
List price: $23.95
New price: $2.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $23.95

Average review score:

terrific - Mike Chinoy has another fan
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-02
This is an absolutely delightful book. It makes the perfect gift for anyone interested in Chinese affairs providing remarkable insight. I was devastated to read the irresponsible inaccuracies in China Wakes by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl Wudunn. Theirs was a China written in the tradition of Ugly Americans who stay at the Palace Hotel for one week complaining about the lack of ice for their Coke. I vowed that I would never ever read another book on China written by American journalists. Luckily, I was given Mike Chinoy's book by a friend. Absolutely brilliant!

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-08
This is one of the better books on China that I've read. I lived in Beijing for two years, and feel that, unlike Kristoff and Dunn in China Wakes, Mike Chinoy really understands China and what makes this most mysterious country tick. And like Jan Wong in Red China Blues, he goes through a transition of being gung-ho on Maoism to seeing the reality of the situation in China. This is one of the things that makes both books so believable. As I am a journalist, I also can appreciate the red tape he went through to get the story out. Chinoy also does an excellent job of describing the Tian'anmen massacre -- one of the better descriptions I've read. I really recommend this book. It's excellent!

Five stars
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-13
I have always imagined that foreign correspondents live more exciting lives than the rest of us, so I read Mike Chinoy's "China Live" to see a glimpse of the truth. Upon reading "China Live," I was pleased with to obtain an inspiring and balanced account of the career path of CNN's first Beijing Bureau Chief. As a journalist, Chinoy was crafty, dedicated, and intrepid. As trite as it may sound, his book leaves you with the feeling that you can go on to achieve great things and leave a significant and lasting mark upon the world. It is especially suitable for sinophiles and aspiring journalists, but also recommended for anyone who enjoys to read.

A balanced review of the Middle Kingdom.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-06
Mike Chinoy has done an excellent job of bringing to life a country that many people think they know so much about but in reality know so lillte about. China is a fascinating country. I spent six weeks there two years ago at a central bank conference so I studied the country in great detail. After my return I read Mike Chinoy's book and I feel it is a balanced account of the Middle Kingdom. Chinoy tells of his fascination with the country in the early days of U.S.-Sino relations. He details the changes that take place after the death of Mao Zadong and the economic changes through he leadership of Deng Xiopang. But his best reporting is the riveting account of June 4, 1989. This was Tiananmen Square and the brutal assault of the peaceful demonstrators. Chinoy was in the thick of the assault and he details his experiences not only on the night but also the next few days. All Chinese should read this book. Many Chinese think that the press has embellished what happened that night and that the government needed to restore order. Reading Chinoy's book may lead them to re-assess their governemnt's brutal policies. As a self-appointed Sinologist and one that has read many many articles and books on " Zhong guo" I would highly recommend this book. And some day I might get the opportunity to sit and talk with Mike Chinoy about his experiences in China.

Excellent read! Insightful look at major historical events.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-10
I could not put this book down. Chinoy (a cousin of mine, but that bears no influence in my review) invites you into the past where you find yourself in the midst of major historical events. His writing is filled with sincere emotion, high-spirited wit and a true sense of the human struggle to be free from opression. The book also opens the door to the fast-paced and unpredictable life of the foreign correspondent and how that role in our society has changed and is changing. A truly insightful book that should make its way into high school history classes -- I would have actually stayed awake in class if we had had material like this.


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