China Books


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

China
Silk Road: Monks, Warriors & Merchants on The Silk Road
Published in Hardcover by Odyssey Publications (2004-02-16)
Author: Luce Boulnois
List price: $34.95
New price: $21.32
Used price: $21.32

Average review score:

All i needed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
Got to me in a decent enough time and nothing was wrong with the book so i would say overall pretty good.

Cross Cultural
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This is the book I wish I had written. I have traveled in most of these countries and studied their history and culture. I was so thrilled to see the information pulled together and the follow-through to show the outcomes of movements and trade goods. Fascinating. Loved it!!

how silk came west
Helpful Votes: 28 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-12
This book is a fantastic cultural adventure and should be read by anyone interested in cross-cultural relationships. More than a topographical description of the silk road, it is a gallop though history explaining paths taken by silk to get to Europe. It starts in prehistoric china and ends with the Karakorum highway, synthetizing in twenty chapters the reasons for the often difficult diffusion of luxury products from the Far East. The author, that evidently knows well chinese history and mentality, takes us by hand into the ancient cinese political issues as to foreign commerce, the fundamental role played by Iranians, byzantines and arabs during the Middle Ages up to the wary reciprocal opening of European and Cinese worlds due to brave and curious travelers. So we meet princesses, monks and merchants and get to know their fascinanting stories. One point of force of the book is the meticulous and modern analysis of these travel tales, so we have a critical perspective of what has come down in history and makes up our cultural background. Marco Polo get's revisited and also less well known ancient and modern travelers are cited.
Boulnois loves silk (her detailed description of materials of the old world and how they were made is enlightening)and its history, so she brings us to her country, France, and to the evolution of the silk industry in the XIX and XX century. And this somehow closes the circle of the story of this precious tissue that reached its apogeum in the last century.
The book however is much more than this and carries a great amount of information. It could be described actually as a textbook on the history of silk. It is well written even if not too easy to read, and sometimes it is a little repetitive.
I enjoyed it very much and feel enriched by its reading.

How to bring history alive
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
This is a fascinating coverage of a area, region call it what you may. The Silk Road has been part of the adventure stories that we have come across over many years, not knowing much about it; but we have thought that one day we might just get there ourselves.

Purchased with the idea that if I am going to visit this area, and I will in the not too distant future, this is the ideal book to read, savior and be intrigued with the Monks Warriors & Merchants that have gone before us.

If only I could pronounce the names - but then that is another book, another read.

China
Spring Winds of Beijing
Published in Hardcover by Glenbridge Publishing, (1992-10)
Author: Gail Copeland
List price: $21.95
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Average review score:

Accurate and VERY readable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-07
The best I've read because of its accuracy. I normally don't read histories because they tend to be dry, but I couldn't put this one down.

Wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-26
Being a student of History I have read my fair share of history books. This was one of the few that held my attetion. I had trouble putting it down, and finished it in 2 readings. "Spring winds of Beijing" was a wonderful introduction to the Chinese people and their culture, and has made a lasting impression on me.

Wonderful book.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-26
This was perhaps one of the most enjoyable books I have ever read. Even though I am a student of history, I typically find non-fiction to be very dry and sometimes boring. With "Spring winds of Beijing" this was not the case. This was a wonderful way to be introduced to the Chinese people and their culture.

EXCELLENT! Reads like a good novel.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-13
This book was not only a pleasure to read, it changed my understanding of the Chinese people. It gave me deeper insight into the culture of China, the problems of it's politics and instilled a fondness in me for it's people that will last. Although, it is an educational piece of literature, it reads like a novel in it's warmth, familiarity and personal touch.. I fell in love with the Chinese people and with Gail Copeland. I was delighted and surprised by it. I highly recommend it to everyone.

China
Tai-Pan
Published in Hardcover by Delacorte Press (1983-03-01)
Author: James Clavell
List price: $24.95
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Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Classic historical fiction -- an unforgettable saga
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-10
I did not expect to find another novel by James Clavell that I liked as well as Shogun or King Rat. But Tai-Pan is, indeed, that novel. This is a magnificent saga of the founding of Hong Kong by powerful British trading interests, which manipulate the British government towards establishing Hong Kong as Britain's trading outpost in the Far East.

Even more, this is the story of an unforgettable fictional character, Dirk Struan, founder of The Nobel House, the leading British trading combine in China. Struan is determined to open up China to Western trade, and to "bring China into the family of nations." This novel is his story, and it is wonderfully told. Struan and the other characters in this novel spring to life, and this is an absorbing novel that is almost impossible to put down. Struan struggles to combine the best traits of the British democratic system and the wisdom of China, of which he notes, "the Chinese are a wise smart people, even if they don't build good cannons like Europeans..." and he admonishes his ship's crews to adopt Chinese practices of good hygiene and other sanitary practices. In this novel Clavell explains the opium trade, and how it came to be an evil that was nevertheless central to the China trade in these times.

This is a novel of intrigue. Struan and his Noble House are locked in a life-and-death commercial and family blood feud with Brock & Sons, another powerful British firm that vies with The Noble House for primacy in trade with China. And the intrigue does not stop there--Clavell introduces us to a breathtaking 19th Century Russian scheme for world dominance in which Struan manipulates Britain, Russia, and the fledgling United States as the world of this time, the 1840s, is seen to be racked with war and political and economic conflict.

This is a fabulous novel of China that no one should pass up. Five stars.

Great adventure with a cast of characters that come to life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-20
One of the best books I have read. Best of all James Clavell's novels. The book is filled with adventure,mystery and continual intrigue. The characters are inter-woven to keep you interested in all their activities.

Awesome!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1997-07-23
Right behind Shogun as the best James Clavell book. Total excitement and adventure. A must-read

Historical Fiction - It is great!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-04
This is a fictionalized account of the life of William Jardine (called Dirk Struan in "Tai-pan")- founder of the trading giant Jardine Matheson & Co. Ltd. This is the "Princely Hong" which is refered to as the Noble House of Hong Kong in Clavell's books.

This book is riviting- and somewhat illuminating historically. If you long for the good old days- take a peek into the 19th century- you will change your mind real fast!

This book grabs you from the first pages, and holds you till the last- it is a masterpeice!

China
Tales of a Chinese grandmother
Published in Unknown Binding by Doubleday, Doran (1945)
Author: Frances Carpenter
List price:

Average review score:

40 years later I still remember my mother reading this to me
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-11
I am not Chinese, however these are wonderful folk tales and present morals and metaphors that transcend culture. I highly recommend this for reading a loud to your children, especially young girls.

Tales of a Chinese Grandmother
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-22
Very good stories and a wonderful look into the old way in China.

Better reading than a bag full of fortune cookies!
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 1997-05-05
Twenty-four years after reading this book, its spirit still remains in me. I first read Tales of a Chinese Grandmother while in the third grade. Although I was raised in a traditional Chinese household, this book explained, with charm, the traditions and origins Chinese folklore.

This is not a college compendeum of every tradition, rather it is an endearing look at Chinese culture as explained by a grandmother to two young children as they grow up in old China.

Best Chinese Book Yet !!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-12
Lovely adjectives, good for bedtime reading with my daddy! After I am sent to bed, I get up and read from where me and my daddy stopped. When I finish I feel like I want to read it all over again!

China
They Called Us White Chinese: The Story of a Lifetime of Service to God Mankind
Published in Hardcover by Eva E Tharp Pubns (1994-03)
Author: Robert N. Tharp
List price: $34.95
New price: $54.90
Used price: $30.60
Collectible price: $50.00

Average review score:

Review:
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-10
This book takes you through a journey of a man's life in his service to God. From the first page, you're introduced to Robert Tharp, son of a missionary in China. Slowly, you're taken through a concise narrative of the daily routine in Manchuria, detailing events as broad as the various warlords who entered the city to as detailed as how the local mastrigate ate plumbs.

The pictures in the book add to the book by showing what people did. Rarely are there books with such quantity of pictures.

There are wonderful anecdotes of everyday life and experiences Bob had. He has an entire section devoted to chinese humor, which are incredibally difficult to translate, but he does it with style.

Anyone with interest in what life in China was like, this book is a must read.

A MASTERPIECE!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-16
As a former student of Robert Tharp, I was interested in his new book, "They Called Us White Chinese". The title seems a little bit funny until I learned that due to the fact that he and his wife, Eva, were interned by the Japanese during WWII they lost all their identity papers, and when they came to the US, immigration officials stamped on their visa that they were, "White Chinese". Thus brings to an end their saga that comprises of almost 900 pages of the most beautiful coffee-table book I have ever seen. This book should cost three times as much. Contemporary Chinese history has never been explained as well as through the eyes of a "Westerner" born and raised in China. A Must Buy!

A great adventure
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-07
They Called Us White Chinese is an autobiography of the late Robert N. Tharp, missionary to China in the early 1900's. I read the book cover to cover. It is extraordinarily well written, detailed, and full of interesting stories. It covers his boyhood which details Chinese construction techniques, social/cultural aspects of village life, provincial wars and his life and adventures in general. His capture during WWII and take over of the Communists follows. The trials of him and his wife in escaping the country are almost incredible. Mr. Tharp had a long career in linguistics in the U.S. working for military and intelligence services, which he describes in the latter third of the book. The book is anything but overedited and Mr. Tharp may carefully describe a particular adventure in vivid detail so that it becomes a short story in itself. I also appreciate the almost complete lack of "self-analysis" or abstract social commentary etc... This book is also a great aid to understanding Chinese history and culture. Highly recommended.

An Amazing Story
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-05
I should note that in 1994 when I first bought this book I was amazed and delighted to find myself mentioned in it (on page 751.) I was one of Bob Tharp's USAF Chinese students, recruited out of basic training in the summer of 1955. Years later, after finishing my Air Force tour (in Korea, using everything I'd been taught at Yale's Institute of Far Eastern Languages by Bob Tharp and his colleagues)and finishing college and law school, I found myself back at Yale, assisting Bob in the same USAF program while I took a correspondence course for the Michigan bar exam.

I wish that I had known just a portion of the information that's in this great work of a book about Bob's early life when I first met him - I would have held him in even higher regard, if that's possible.

This book paints an amazing picture of a tumultuous time in Chinese (and American) history, and the latter portions show clearly the contributions that Bob and Eva Tharp and their colleagues made to US security. He trained hundreds of air intelligence specialists, and many of them, like myself, found our lives forever changed and enhanced by our exposure to Chinese language and culture.

China
Things That Must Not Be Forgotten : A Childhood in Wartime China
Published in Hardcover by Macfarlane Walter & Ross (2000)
Author: Michael David Kwan
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New price: $125.98
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Average review score:

Simply amazing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-24
I was sent a copy of this book by my mum from Australia last year and only recently had the chance to finally read the book.

It's no wonder that this book is an award winner (2000 Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize). Kwan keeps you rivetted to his story, told through eyes of a young boy growing up in very turbulent times. In spite of coming from a wealthy family, it cannot save him from the terrors and turmoil brought to Northern China in the 1930s and 1940s, nor from the racial judgement passed on him for being half-Chinese and half-White.

How Kwan manages to survive is quite amazing. He is abandoned by his own mother and faces major abuses at school. Then, war begins and he begins to witness the atrocities committed by the Japanese in China. Finally, after the Japanese are defeated, he nearly loses his father to the KMT government that his father has faithfuly served through the resistance movement. He is not even safe from his own family, who try to use him as a means to extort his father for money that no longer exists.

An absolute must read for anyone interested in China, the Japanese invasion of China, and a boy's coming of age.

a powerful and well written memoir
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-30
An extraordinary story told with well controlled language and subtle understatements. The book chronicles the lives in a previledged, but also marginalized, world where everyone is deeply enshrouded in his or her own loneliness : the western expatriates in China, the mixed-blood children like the author himself, the western women married to Chinese men but unable to summon any love for the country or its people, the well-cultured mem ostracized by the society for their marriages to western women. Each of them, making good-intentioned efforts to connect, failed miserably because of their own deep-rooted prejudice, social barriars imposed by other people, or simply the uncontrollable historical whirlwinds. Outside this walled-in existence, a war is raging on with unimaginable callousness. The wall would eventually crumble down and the fineness of the Legation Quarter be swallowed by the brutal and rancid humanities of that era. Reminding us at times of Proust and Graham Greene, this remembrance of things past documents, in a hushed voice, an extraordinary age and all the human efforts to stay emerged in the midst of sweeping torrents. Warmth and friendship flicker from time to time in this vast emotional void : the author's attachment to his down-to-earth and understanding nanny Shu Ma, his natural bonding with the reticent peasant Xiao Hu, and the unusual and quiet friendship between the boy and the Japanese Admiral. Language in the last couple chapters slips a little bit and becomes less disciplined. But overall this is a wonderfully written memoir. Saddened by the news of the author's death couple weeks ago, I was especially grateful for the gift he left with us in the form of this book.

A moving, understated memoir
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-26
I bought Michael David Kwan's "Things That Must Not Be Forgotten" after reading a glowing review in the Washington Post. I was not disappointed. It is a moving, understated memoir about Mr. Kwan's childhood years starting shortly before the outbreak of World War II and ending as the Kuomintang was breathing its last in mainland China. Although young David was fortunate enough to be born into a wealthy family as a "half-caste" child of a Chinese father and a Swiss mother (who abandoned the family very early in David's life), he was never considered to be a true part of either the white and Chinese communities. The editorial reviews give a good overview of the content of the book and the increasing difficulties that David and his family endured under the Japanese and even more so under the corrupt Nationalist Chinese government. The narrative is brisk and engaging; it is probably the best work of non-fiction that I have read in quite some time.

Sadly, on May 20th of this year Mr. Kwan suffered a fatal heart attack just two weeks before the official U.S.-publication of this book. We are all very fortunate that he was able to give us such a memorable farewell gift.

"Things That Must Not Be Forgotten" won the 2000 Kirayama Prize for non-fiction, beating out such well-received books as Herbert Bix's "Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan," Helen Zia's "Asian American Dreams" and Chanrithy Him's "When Broken Glass Floats."

A beautiful work, both tender and powerful.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-03
I read a review and an excerpt of this book in Toronto last summer, and waited anxiously for it to be published here in the States. I read it in two days, gulping it down excitedly; then I re-read it slowly, informed of the story but savoring the beautiful prose. I wrote Mr. Kwan a "fan letter," only to learn today in this forum that he passed away. I was hoping for a sequel.

China
Three Ways of Thought in Ancient China
Published in Paperback by DoubleDay (1956-06)
Author: Arthur Waley
List price: $2.50
New price: $24.50
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Average review score:

Everyone with an interest in the Far East should read this
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-26
Mr. Arthur Waley has proven that a good work can stand the test of time. First published almost 60 years ago this work does a wonderful jobof explianing the differences between various schools of thought not just in China but in the rest of Asia.

The differences between the teachings of Chuang Tzu, Mencius and The realists may not seem like much to us westerners but these three groups have all done a lot to shape Asia.

The thing I like most about this book is that it is short and broken up into three parts. Therefore your mind doesn't do a blowout trying to digest all the material and you can study each school indivudally.

Overall-Great book, most of the stories are very deep and will hold some meaning for everyone if you are just willing to listen.

A brief glimpse of Chinese philosophy.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-16
Three Ways of Thought in Ancient China is a book that opens the door to Chinese philosophy. Some of the writing may be familiar, such as Confucius while other lagalist writing sounds more Machiavellian. A good book for an introduction to Chinese philosophy, much of it reads like poetry.

MASTERPIECE
Helpful Votes: 33 out of 34 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-04
This work is one of the very few great English language classics in the exposition of traditional Chinese thought. It is delightful reading. Its author, Arthur Waley, remains long after his death the premier translator of traditional Chinese and Japanese literature. The pleasure of reading this book for the first time, years ago, influenced me in great measure to complete a doctorate in Far Eastern Languages and Civilizations. Today, it is the first book I recommend that my students read as an introduction to traditional Chinese thought; the book gives a clear glimpse of the value systems of people in China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, and Singapore right down to today. Three Ways of Thought in Ancient China, by Arthur Waley, is a book not to be missed by any educated person. Enjoy!

An Olympic Effort
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
It's easy to give short shrift to a book that hopes to summarize three major traditions of philosophy in just over 200 pages. What makes this brilliant is Waley's assembling views of Daoist, Confucist and Realist thinking in the form of imaginary colloquia between the various philosophers.
The result is an introduction, for the Western reader, to the rich and highly conflicted intellectual background of Chinese civilization.

As China becomes more of a world power, this little book, even without mention of Maoist thought and legacy will remain a good, short introduction to the foundations of that world.

Lynn Hoffman, author of bang BANG

China
Tibet: My Story : An Autobiography
Published in Hardcover by Element Books Ltd (1997-10)
Authors: Jetsun Pema and Gilles Van Grasdorff
List price: $24.95
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Used price: $1.42
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Average review score:

wonderful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
I read the book in Spanish, and even though i am English, the real Pema came through. Kindness itself and far too modest. I count myself proud to have known and count her a friend.

Fascinating account of life in Tibet
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1997-10-29
This book is more than a story of one life. It is the story of a whole nation and the struggles that it endured at the hands of the Chinese, which continue today. Jetsun Pema paints a wonderful picture of a complex people, in simple terms. I recommend highly!

Cry of a nation
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-05
Jetsun Pema is the younger sister of the Dalai Lama, and has played a major part in the care and education of refugee Tibetan children.
This book tells the story of Jetsun Pema's childhood in Tibet before the ruthless Chinese Communist invasion of 1949, and her subsequent flight and education in India, Switzerland and England.
It also tells of the oppression by the Chinese Communist occupation of Tibet and the genocide and cultural destruction of the Tibetan people in which 1 200 000
Tibetan men, women and children have been ruthlessly exterminated by the
Chinese Communists.
Children were forced to kill their parents and parents forced to applaud the execution of their children on pain of death, during thamzing (Chinese Communist public punishment sessions). Very young children were forced to see their parents being dragged through the streets of the village or town and then beaten, stoned and finally executed, simply because they had worked for the previous government or were heirs to landed property.Millions of Chinese who have been brought into Tibet to demographically swamp the indigenous Tibetans. Nuns were raped and monasteries and landmarks destroyed.
Millions of Tibetan children have starved to death in the Chinese created famine and food taken from the Tibetans and transferred to the Chinese or exported to Arab countries.
This is all told in this book by Jetsun Pema.
Pema also tells of her love for and education and care of the thousands of Tibetan children who have passed through SOS children's villages in India.
What results is a compassionate and passionate account by a great woman, and a cry for action on behalf of the Tibetan people before they are completely destroyed.
The world is clearly not listening, the international media and universities preferring to condemn Israel for self-defence and the USA for the war against terrorism, while real atrocities and genocide go on without a single word of protest.
Hard-core Communists in fact applaud these atrocities as they do atrocities and murde the world over.
Nice people, Communists, aren't they?



A wonderful personal account with many great stories
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-23
An interesting yet easy-to-read account by the sister of the Dalai Lama about life growing up in Tibet and eventually relocating due to the Chinese invasion. Wonderful insights and stories, and a different perspective on His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

China
Tibetan Buddhist Medicine and Psychiatry: The Diamond Healing
Published in Paperback by Weiser Books (1990-05)
Author: Terry Clifford
List price: $12.95
New price: $11.72
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Average review score:

A Thorough Exploration of Psychological Healing from an eastern perspective
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
This book is truly and evidently a classic. Clifford presents the methods of Diamond Healing - only by means of letting go of ego-grasping and ignorance might we begin to merge mind, body and spirit with truth.
Tibetan Ayurveda consists of the medicine of the tantric vehicle, the dharma, shamanistic practice, and an extensive pharmacopoeia. It includes a comprehensive chart of the beneficial herbs of Tibetan psychiatry. However, most medicines should be bought rather than prepared, for there is an extensive preparation ritual performed by the enlightened healer. Generally, the method of the Tibetan doctor is to treat on all levels by way of profound compassion to reduce negativity.
As the most psychological religion, the view of illness seems to be essentially psychosomatic - the repercussion of karma, the poisons of the mind. Other theories which are conveyed include an imbalance of life energy (prana), disorders of the humors - these are wind, phlegm, and bile - toxins, and the demons of the mind. The three humors correspond with various states of internal and bodily suffering. Left open to individual interpretation, however the author concludes that they are interpretations of the inner psyche, or presentations of a psychological state.

Phlegm disorders suggest a tendency toward catatonia.

Disorders of wind cause anxiety, sorrow and discomfort. They are treated with warming herbs.

Disorders of bile - treated with bitter and cooling herbs - cause frustration and rage.

Amongst therapies are mandala meditations, the practice of mindfulness so one may come to know that he or she is not the only being afflicted with suffering and imbalance, and powdered formulas, oils and incense. Fascinating the breakthrough which leads to the first major tranquilizer was found within the chemical structure of rawolfia serpentina, a plant used for centuries to treat madness in the east. There are invocations such as mantras and meditation on the Medicine Buddha. These are among the most powerful visualizations for self-healing.
There is explicit material on the religion itself, the profound psychology implicated, and the Tibetan Book of Living and Dying. When one first finds these concepts may seem esoteric. But as Clifford examines they become profoundly sensical.
My fiancé - who is a Christian - and I suffer from madness. We are presently taking necessary western medicines, and using pre-prepared items such as incense, oil, and dietary intervention thus far. However, we are considering taking reiki, which is a spiritual discipline one of any faith can pursue.

Ancient Knowledge that is still valid today
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-29
I am a Native American and I have found many spiritual similarities between my own Hidatsa-Mandan traditions and the Tibetan tradition. The section on causes of Psychiatric disorders is the most interesting and relevant section in my opinion.

If nothing else, this book will open the hard nosed "scientific" community's eyes. The mere survival of its people and traditions is a testament to the validity of the views of Tibetan culture.

super
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-12
fantastic book! a great way for westerners to learn about tibetan medicine... Clifford enables the reader to connect an eastern tradition to our western minds... if you're interested in Tibetan medicine, this book is a great on to begin with...

Indispensable book for everyone interested in Tibetan Medici
Helpful Votes: 31 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-21
True story of psychiatric nurse, Terry Clifford,who left her job working in a NYC psychiatric hospital to travel to Tibet, Nepal and Northern India to research traditional Tibetan medical methods of working with mental illness.

The traditional Tibetan doctors really opened up due to Ms. Clifford's sincerity, knowledge of physchiatric illness, and amiable personality. They translated esoteric Tibetan medical concepts, related expereinces from their medical practices and even gave her traditional Tibetan herbal formulas for pyschiatric illnesses.

The author's description and explanation of "demons" in Tibetan Medicine, including one that causes the patient to believe that their religion is the one and only true religion, shows a great deal of the insight,humour and intelligence that permeates the entire book.

Tragically, Ms. Clifford died shortly after this book was published and her work was cut short.

Everyone working with traditional Tibetan medicine owes a debt to Ms. Clifford's groundbreaking work.

China
To the Harbin Station: The Liberal Alternative in Russian Manchuria, 1898-1914
Published in Hardcover by Stanford University Press (1999-05-01)
Author: David Wolff
List price: $60.00
New price: $59.97
Used price: $54.00

Average review score:

i wanted to write it!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-15
I red this book for a very simple reason: the research i'm working at is just about Harbin, its uniqueness as the only russian city outside russia and the cultural atmosphere it enjoyed during the 1920's. I found Wolff's work very useful, a miracle of different sources, but i keep asking to myself: why such an amazing experiment in history as my Harbin was not studied until now? Anyway, good job..i wish i had written it myself!

Wonderful! I am a happy shnick(sp?) once again! Superb!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-05
I didn't really read the book, but I used to stay after school in 3rd grade and draw cartoons with Wolff. His cartoons were wonderful, so I have no doubt his insights and analyses of Harbin and the Chinese Eastern Railway are every bit as good.

Poles in Manchuria
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-30
I found the book very interesting .As a kharbinetz born in 1949 in Harbin I left Manchuria as an infant for Poland and don't remember myself anything of the atmosphere of that unique town.My parents (they were Russian and Polish) were born and spend their youth there.I remember their stories about that vibrant, colorful, exciting and multicultural life in that Pearl of North Manchuria.The Poles and Jews are mentioned as "minorities" in the predominantly russian town, but the significance of polish technical staff during construction and running the CER was underestimated.Russians noticed that influx of Poles in CER, so even press in S.Petersburg warned about "polish danger" on russian railways .The personalities showned as Russians were Poles : Stanislaw Kierbedz, Adam Szydlowski, Stefan von Offenberg, Seweryn Wachowski, Mikolaj Liniewicz, Aleksander Letowski,Alfred Zaremba ).The magnificent Harbin railway station was design of polish architect Ignacy Cytowicz, art nouveau in Harbin was supported by architect Konstanty Jokisz then responsible for New Town development.The landmark of the city famous railway bridge was built by polish steel construction company "Konstanty Rudzki i S-ka" from then russian Warsaw, frames were prepared in it's plant in Minsk Mazowiecki then sent by rail to Odessa and shipped through seas to Vladivostok and then on barges to the site in Harbin.All steel bridges on later Amur Railway finished in 1916 were also prepared and built by that company.It is estimated that about 35% of technical personnel of CER was up to the IWW of polish origin.Suppressed in their homeland Poland , sought career and better life in outskirts of Russian Empire, so did Jews fleeing from antisemitism and discrimination.But they were active rather in commerce, banking and industry .Far away from "problem" areas all "minorities" could live without all the limitations imposed on them in the Empire.Ironically as it is they were accepted as "Russians" by St.Petersburg bureaucracy, that was unable to furnish Manchuria with adequate number of energetic, able and educated people of pure russian origin.

Fascinating research into a convergence of forces
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-06
This book provokes a tremendous amount of thought. A broad and powerful array of forces - political, social, cultural, and commercial - converged at the start of the century in this uncharted bit of Manchuria to make for a great laboratory experiment. The author describes brillantly the under-emphasized successes of Harbin and the Chinese Eastern Railway, which are a triumph of cooperation, tolerance, vision, and simple good sense. Much is to be learned in terms of strategy and negotiation from Russian finance minister Witte, who, with careful patience, offered mutual benefit rather than threat to potential adversaries from other nations, ethnicities, cultures, and factions of his own government. These themes are of the greatest relevance today, with diversity at the forefront and corporations increasing still further their influence away from home borders.

The author has researched his subject comprehensively, exploiting fully his outstanding combination of academic and linguistic skills.