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Ten years old but still fresh and excitingReview Date: 2006-06-10
I love this bookReview Date: 2002-04-15
read and be renewedReview Date: 1998-01-28
A faith building bookReview Date: 1999-07-24

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Superb!Review Date: 2003-08-13
A highly recommended first text reading for an overview of Chinese philosophy for the professor of Chinese philosophy to student or layperson!
A Must BuyReview Date: 2002-12-01
Buy this book!Review Date: 2002-10-04
- J. McCausland
Excellent overview!Review Date: 2000-11-20
I use this book a lot in my classes: I recommend it highly.
(This book is a revised version of a much more expensive hardback edition published by Peter Lang.)


An enlightening easy read.Review Date: 2008-04-18
Deeply memorable collection of stories - highly recommendedReview Date: 2008-05-09
The Corpse Walker is the kind of book you will think about long after you've finished reading it!
Borgesian NonfictionReview Date: 2008-04-28
Throughout, you get a hint that Liao Yiwu did not stumble into the stories by accident. His wit and genius comes through loud and clear.
My only complaint is why only one volume? Why did Pantheon Books not publish the three volumes that are mentioned in the introduction?
On the strength of this book, I think Liao Yiwu deserves the Nobel Prize. Since there isn't one for muckraking, he should be given one for Medicine on the grounds that he helps keep the world sane.
compelling stories about ordinary people in ChinaReview Date: 2008-04-16

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I cannot afford a thorough readingReview Date: 1998-04-17
Wei: dissident and intellectualReview Date: 2001-04-20
Nobody who studies Chinese politics can ignore Wei's ideas.Review Date: 1998-02-19
Forbidden reading in China, required reading everywhere elseReview Date: 1998-10-19
That makes it surprising to encounter a genuine hero, which the author of The Courage To Stand Alone certainly is. It is doubly strange that he should emerge from China, the land of groupthink and hyperconformity. Who would have thought that a child of the Cultural Revolution would become a major force for decency and dignity even as those qualities were being rendered quaint and passe by the rush for market share in the New Global Economy?
When Wei Jingsheng was first put into prison and began writing the letters that make up the bulk of To Stand Alone, Mandela had been in prison for 17 years, Solzhenitsyn had just published Gulag in English, and the concept of dissent was unknown in China. When Wei was released in 1997 and flew to the US after having served 18 years in China's gulag (known there as laogai), Mandela was president of South Africa, Solzhenitsyn had returned to a free Russia, and Deng had transformed China from a socialist police state to a plutocratic police state. With all the stuff in our hardware stores and clothing shops bearing the Made in China tag, you might even think China had been transformed into a free society. You would be mistaken to think that, however. Wei was imprisoned for exercising one of the simplest and most basic rights, that of free speech. He published a magazine. In it, he urged the Chinese Communist Party to honor all the grand promises it made in the constitutions it churned out from time to time, promises like "The People have the right to speak out freely, air views fully, hold great debates, and write dazibao (large character posters posted on walls in public places for all to read)".
Wei had begun his career as a dissident by putting up one such dazibao: his essay "Democracy: The Fifth Modernization". This document (included in To Stand Alone) is a piece of impassioned logic which a Jefferson or Hancock would be proud to sign. He wrote it and posted it the same night on Beijing's Democracy Wall. Unlike the others who posted writings there, Wei left his name and number. That wasn't safe, but Wei believed the Chinese were getting a worldwide reputation for spinelessness, thanks to people like Deng and Lin Biao who, during the reign of Mao Zedong, had taken the craft of brown-nosing and sycophancy to new depths.
In 1979 Deng was just beginning his reign, and many thought he was a new kind of leader, which he was, in some ways. In other ways he was the oldest kind of leader there is: a tyrant. In his magazine, Wei identified him as dictator-in-the-making a full 10 years before Deng ordered the murder of hundreds of students in Tiananmen Square. That prediction put Wei in prison, the special Chinese kind of prison where you are expected to confess your "errors" and "crimes".
There was a certain amount of international pressure on China, so Wei probably could have gotten out early for confessing his "crimes". But he had that thing about backbone, about standing upright for what you believe in. He was, it must be noted, a little stubborn. Actually, more than a little stubborn. Actually, you know nothing about stubborn until you read this book. Picture David Niven going into the oven in Bridge On The River Kwai for insisting on being treated like an officer according to the Geneva Convention. Now picture him doing that every day for 18 years, and you have some idea of what Wei went through. Not an oven, but a box without windows, very little food, very little heat in a region bordering Tibet, no medical care, sleep made impossible, beatings, solitary confinement for months on end...All these measures notwithstanding, Wei would not confess to a crime he had not committed. He wouldn't even get impolite. In his letters from prison, he demands the basic rights he's been stripped of in a tone less harsh than I use on my neighbor's barking dog. Reading these letters one occasionally gets the feeling he's been detained through some silly bureaucratic mix-up. Of course, he wasn't. He was thrown into the largest system of concentration camps that yet exists on the planet, just like millions of his compatriots. He's out now, but the others are still there, doing slave labor, starving, being executed by the score, involuntarily donating their organs to international markets...
When the Chinese Communist Party falls, as all brutal, sadistic regimes inevitably do, this book of letters and one landmark essay will be remembered as one of the chief causes of its demise.
Wei, if you read this, I would urge you to post Democracy: The Fifth Modernization on this site. It's common for authors to put excerpts of their books here, and that essay would be a perfect sample. I doubt the Party will be able to have it removed.

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important work of philosophyReview Date: 2008-03-11
ExcellentReview Date: 2007-11-29
A "different" translationReview Date: 2007-03-08
However, I found this translation to be a bit difficult. One of the reviewers on the back of the book refers to it as "poetic" - well, maybe; mostly I found it a bit of a struggle to make sense of it, and had to read through it with several parallel translations to figure out what Roberts was translating. However, in that situation, read with several parallel translations, this translation provides an worthwhile "spin". I find Mair's translation much cleaner, simpler, and more comprehensible. The two together are nice.
An exceptional translation.Review Date: 2002-05-08
Roberts is a Professor of Chinese at New York University, and the goal of his work is to assist his reader in understanding Lao-tzu's difficult poem. His book includes a twenty-three page Introduction that offers the historical background of the TAO TE CHING. He then annotates his literal translation of the two-part, eighty-one stanza poem with his insightful commentary. His translation is just as scholarly as Robert Henricks' translation, more literal than Stephen Harrison's poetic rendering of Lao-tzu's TAO, and more challenging than Red Pine's excellent translation.
G. Merritt
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this is his best book of all!Review Date: 1998-05-14
The life story of an American hero!Review Date: 1998-03-13
Great book. I know where some are.Review Date: 1998-01-10
A Wonderful Biography by Gen. Scott!Review Date: 1998-07-11
"Claire Lee Chennault was a indivialist, and some of that indiviualty must have rubbed off on me because I to have been a indiviaulast.. a mavrick general, in my carrer. But first I had to meet him, and that took some doing. I had to lie cheat and surely steal. There is a saying "never steal anything small" well what I stole was a B-17E FLying Fortress. Right or wrong, under the surrcumstances I did it. It is a long story and I have to Start at the beginning."

Very Nice...Review Date: 2003-04-08
A book to look at over and overReview Date: 2005-06-07
a day in the life of chinaReview Date: 2004-11-13
Capturing the beauty of ChinaReview Date: 2000-06-28

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Great story of human spiritReview Date: 2008-05-27
Amazing story :-)Review Date: 2008-05-15
His hands and feet were absolutely covered in frostbite. He has had some limbs and toes and fingers amputated, and various other surgeries as a result of his experience up there. He refers to May 26, 2006 as the day he died, and writes in here the pros and cons for climbing Everest. He puts his family on both lists; on the con - the fear of leaving his wife and kids without a husband or father and on the pro list, the idea to show them that he was willing to take a chance to live out his dream. He describes the bitter cold and all the thoughts running through his head. It's a book that takes you through different emotions - triumph, fear, relief and everything in between.
Whether you like mountain climbing or not, this book is a great read. It is moving and interesting and it's good to see a happy ending. I really enjoyed this and hope you will too.
Great readReview Date: 2008-06-05
Lincoln Hall tells a great storyReview Date: 2008-05-16

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How to overcome culture shock in ChinaReview Date: 1998-04-24
Becoming sensitive to another culture-Chinese CultureReview Date: 1998-04-28
Interesting Insight into a Perplexing WorldReview Date: 2000-08-09
Book captures the joys and frustrations of living in ChinaReview Date: 1998-04-15
The book will be a wonderful service for those planning to go to China to teach, and for those whose dreams take them only as far as the living room couch.
A must read.
Margot E. Landman
Director, U.S.-China Teachers
Exchange Program
American Council of Learned Societies

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Excellent instructions particularly for beginners.Review Date: 1999-08-05
Great for IdeasReview Date: 2000-09-15
CatálogoReview Date: 1999-06-27
Great Studio BookReview Date: 2001-12-05
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