China Books
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SoldReview Date: 2004-05-05
Postcards from XiamenReview Date: 2004-02-18
The story is a charming and compelling one, but is Xiamen and its people really like Sandy has described, or is this fiction masquerading as non-fiction? Well, I was so enchanted with what I was hearing about Xiamen that I went and visited the Slavins twice, for a total of ten weeks. The Xiamen you will read about is truly the Xiamen I experienced first hand.
Do something nice for yourself---read this book!
A trip home for MeganReview Date: 2004-02-17
China: Up Close And PersonalReview Date: 2003-11-28

Collectible price: $12.99

extraordinary book, must read for understanding past & present ChinaReview Date: 2006-10-11
In fact the author is named only by his French name in the book in French, Jean Pasqualini (from his Corsican father's name). I guess that if he had had a Caucasian face, and not a Chinese mother, he would have never spent all these years in a Chinese prison and would have been just expelled or at least been better treated. The irony was that, even if he spoke perfect Mandarin when he went to prison, he couldn't read Chinese. At least a benefit of his prison years was that he learned how to read Chinese. What is fascinating in this book is to discover the meticulous and permanent ideological work on all these prisoners, and on Pasqualini in particular. I was expecting mainly stories of harsh life, beatings, physical torture, etc. but no, the key issue for Pasqualini was to play the permanent ideological game, or some kind of mental torture in fact, where you really have to accept to be brainwashed, at least act as if you were, otherwise you can't survive. Or course there were immense sufferings, but the irony is that they seem mainly coming from planned hunger in the prison, but that due to famine in China, prisoners seemed, even if half starving, almost better off than most peasants who happen to be described in the book (precisely in the book some high ranking guy at one stage visits the prison and complains about this situation, saying that prisoners are treated too well during the famine). When you read this book you understand much better what may have been the life during the culture revolution later on. For example, with what Pasqualini calls "l'épreuve" (ordeal ?), when tens or hundreds of people shout at you, again and again during days, during hours, when you have to publicly confess your (most of the time imaginary) horrible ideological crimes. Everybody interested in China should have read this book (as well as Harry Wu's book). A must read.
By the way the author's Chinese name BAO Ruo-Wang doesn't appear on the cover of the French edition of this book, only Jean PASQUALINI. One can easily understand the better marketing effect of a Chinese name for selling a book about the "Laogai" (name used for the past and present Chinese gulag). I don't know why they didn't use as well his Chinese name for the French edition in 1974 ?
The not-so-weird thing (in Maoist Paris in the 60's) is that it was an American journalist who, in Paris, was interested in Pasqualini's story in the first place, when Pasqualini was brought back by the French authorities from China in 1964 (at the reopening of French-Chinese diplomatic relations). He had been imprisoned since 1957 in Beijing on charge of having been a spy (what he was more or less for the US or UK military, at least before 1949). The US journalist who in fact wrote the book in interviewing Jean Pasqualini in Paris is Rudolph Chelminski (source Penguin's authors biographies: Rudolph Chelminski has written articles for dozens of national magazines, ranging from People and Time to The Atlantic Monthly, and his prior books include The French at Table. He holds a degree from Harvard and has studied at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques. Raised in Connecticut, he began living in Europe more than thirty years ago, when Life magazine dispatched him to Paris.)
Pasqualini himself says in the introduction that he was not good at writing. Of course a large part of, if not all, the merit of the story goes to Pasqualini.
Apparently the book is 'out of print' in English ? But according to amazon.fr, the book, even if published in 1974 in France is still available in French at its famous French publisher's, Gallimard. It is called "Prisonnier de Mao; Sept ans dans un camp de travail en Chine" by Jean Pasqualini and Rudolph Chelminski. The book was probably ostracized in the 60's and 70's by the French Maoist and pro-China intelligentsia, very influent in Paris (including well-known journalists, thinkers, politicians, praising Maoism and the great Culture Revolution), that's why the book is probably still available in Gallimard's warehouse... (not joking..., the famous French speaking Belgian sinologist and great writer, Pierre Rickmans, aka Simon Leys, who wrote against the Culture Revolution at the time, in the early 70's, had to leave Paris for Canberra to find peace if not save his life !)
Jean Pasqualini became a quiet Chinese teacher and translator, in France, after 1964. He died in 1997 at 71. "In 1992 he, along with Harry Wu and Jeff Fiedler, became a founding director of the Laogai Research Foundation. Illness incapacitated Mr. Pasqualini in many of the years since, but he did write a number of essays for Laogai Report, including "Beijing's Old Trick" for the February 1995 edition." [...]
Well, do read the book if you can find it. Amongst many other merits, the story is well told and well written; it's really like a good novel, and you won't leave the book until you finish it 2-3 hours later.
One of the best books ever on ChinaReview Date: 2007-12-26
A Must-ReadReview Date: 2003-10-02
Rare account of seven years in the Chinese gulagReview Date: 2001-08-05

The book is very good!Review Date: 2000-03-14
Eileen Chang is the greatestReview Date: 2004-12-09
Lessons for today from Maoist ChinaReview Date: 2002-08-26
"The sage never has a mind of his own;
He considers the minds of the common people to be his mind."
Today, he would not change a word for the sage: the sheng-jen in Beijing. True, modern China, a colossus of 1.2 billion people, is fronted by Shanghai and other booming, skyscrapered, fiber-opticked, globally connected metropolises. But beyond the urban fronts, reality is 900 million peasants--75% of the total population--living a rural, feudal life with Marxist trappings. What gives the Beijing mandarin insomnia is not rhetorical exchanges with America like we saw earlier in 2001. No, it's much more the primal fear bad weather and bad crops might visit hunger upon the 900 million--if the peasants go hungry, the government goes down and chaos surely follows. Chaos, for the Chinese mind, being anathema (off the Tao, hindering wu-wei).
The Rice-Sprout Song by Eileen Chang (1920-95), first published in 1955, deftly evokes rural Chinese life in the early days of the Maoist Revolution. Though well known to Chinese readers everywhere, Chang's work has only recently been in print again for English readers. In 1998, three years after her death, the University of California reissued this novel and a companion work, The Rouge of the North.
Chang, a giant in Chinese literature, wrote and lived a self-proclaimed aesthetic of desolation, especially after immigrating to the United States in the mid-Fifties. A Garbo-esque recluse, Chang was found dead in a barren Hollywood, California, studio apartment. Her will asked that her body be "cremated instantly, the ashes scattered in any desolate spot, over a fairly wide area, if on land." If Chang, as she said, was haunted by thoughts of desolation, then The Rice-Sprout Song shows a corollary to her artistic hunger: Her writing transcends any simple, obvious political interpretation of her material. Neither pro-Mao nor anti-Mao, but a literary meditation on peasant lives caught up in the ironies of political will and human need when hunger stalks the countryside.
The Rice-Sprout Song gets underway with a common family event: a wedding. Gold Flower of T'an Village will marry Plenty Own Chou of neighboring Chou Village. This might not be a joyous occasion for Chang begins to summon the isolation and loneliness of village life: "Sunlight lay across the street like an old yellow dog, barring the way. The sun had grown old here." Yes, even that universal restorer of the spirit--the sun--can be menacing. That all is not right when the festive wedding occasion arrives is shown by note of the "inferior food" that of necessity is served. Big Uncle complains that he cannot see the rice in his bowl of watery gruel. This jho mush--anything but solid rice--becomes one thematic particular for hunger that haunts this novel.
If Chang were less an artist, the reader's easy-to-hate nemesis would be Comrade Wong, the kan pu of T'an Village, the local representative of the Party. For it is Comrade Wong's unenviable task to carry out a political action showing support for the People's Liberation Army in their fight on the Korean front: a gift the peasants cannot afford: half a pig and forty catties of rice cakes from each family. But before this leads to the tragic end to The Rice-Sprout Song, we follow, in flashback, Wong as he finds the love of his life, Shah Ming. He loses her in the vagaries of fighting for the PLA. When at last he sees her again, she waves from a window in the facade of a collapsed building on the battlefield. Inside the building, Wong sees only rubble and overhead, at the window, nothing. He knows his hallucination proved Shah Ming was saying good-bye from beyond. For Comrade Wong, fate gave him nothing but the Party.
We also see dramatic irony when Comrade Ku, the city intellectual, comes to live in T'an Village, to learn the ways of the peasants. His goal of a movie script about village life suffers from writer's block; he habitually sneaks off to another town to buy food to eat on the sly. And when Big Aunt, who spouts Communist rhetoric that is appallingly upbeat, breaks down in a fit of anger. She says they are all empty-bellied and she doesn't care if she is reported. And when Moon Scent, the wife of Gold Root, returns from working three years as a maid in Shanghai. A force to be reckoned with, Moon Scent, in an act of righteous anger, gives this tragedy its capstone.
Essential reading that shares the texture, the heritage, and the yearnings of nearly a billion of our fellow earthlings, search out this reissue of The Rice-Sprout Song. As one t'ai chi ch'uan teacher said, "Perfect doesn't exist. Near-perfect does." The Rice-Sprout Song is a "near-perfect" evocation of the common people in the timeless Middle Kingdom.
Sparse, Stunning Language - A Great & Tragic StoryReview Date: 1999-10-28

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Probably the best guide around for the budget traveler to Hong KongReview Date: 2007-06-28
There's a chapter each on Hong Kong Island, Kowloon, the New Territories, and the outlying islands. The description of each town or wilderness inside these divisions takes the form of a walking tour. The authors guide the reader through the streets well, and like all Rough Guides the maps here are clear and accurate. I unfortunately didn't visit Macau, so I cannot comment on that portion of the guide.
I didn't use the accommodation listings, as like many travelers I prefer to stay with local from hospitality associations for closer contact with the local culture. As the Rough Guide does not cover this option, I have removed one star from my rating. However, there does indeed seem to be an adequate amount of both budget and luxury accommodation, with the stops in between of course. The needs of shoestring travelers are not given short shrift here, as in the offerings of all too many guidebook publishers. I did use the recommendations for restaurants, which do a great job of steering travelers to hole-in-the-wall eateries with little English signage which might not look fancy, but which show you the real Hong Kong in a way flashier places don't.
At the end of the book one finds a history of the region, as well as some general information on Hong Kong culture. The history soberly discusses the uncertainty of Hong Kong's true autonomy after the handover, while other guidebooks I read gave only a rosy view. In these appendices there's also a list of films and books, fiction and non-fiction, about Hong Kong, letting the reader learn more about the place before he visits.
If you're an independent travelver going to Hong Kong, I'd certainly recommend ROUGH GUIDE TO HONG KONG & MACAU. I find it better than the Lonely Planet guide due to the range of its listings and the quality of its maps, and light years ahead of the paltry listings and assumption that the reader is a millionaire which one finds in many other guidebook lines.
Insight Guide HK and MacauReview Date: 2007-01-05
Great Walking ToursReview Date: 2007-07-04
Very good overall guide of Hong Kong and MacauReview Date: 2007-04-02
The descriptions of various areas were quite accurate, and the maps were mostly very good. The one of Macau seemed to have some minor errors, but that place is very confusing to walk around, so it could have been me. Anyway, you want the maps in this book or something pretty good, because the free tourist map is basically worthless.
I really like Rough Guides, because their reviews are very honest and balanced, and they are excellent about cross-referencing recommended locations, restaurants, hotels, etc and maps in each book. This guide is up to the same high standards, so it was very easy to use.
I would recommend that the walking tours guide (available for free at the airport, etc) is a good supplement to this guide. I used it extensively.

great bokReview Date: 2008-04-20
Check it out!Review Date: 1997-04-15
Excellent!Review Date: 1999-02-23
A dear friend to the adult Samoan language learnerReview Date: 2003-02-25

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RivetingReview Date: 2002-01-16
the characters out of the book and spend some time with them over tea. This book is destined as a best seller.
Shanghai Quartet: The Crossings of Four Women of ChinaReview Date: 2001-12-27
When I got to my conference, I gave the book to the first person I met who was also writing about the people of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. I wanted to share it with everyone.
So, now I'm on-line to get a new copy. I don't want to be without it.
Great read --inspiring!Review Date: 2001-11-27
This memoir also gives voice to a generation of Chinese immigrants who immigrated to the US in the early 80's. This generations has thus far been very silent and this book provides an accurate account of their experience.
In addition, Shanghai Quartet tells of a Catholic and aristocratic family in Shanghai that we rarely see in other books. I highly recommend this complex book -- it was a true joy to read!
Composing possible livesReview Date: 2001-12-22
It's like reading Proust's Rememberance of Times Past, but not so long. Each detail is mined for its resonances, memories, connections, meaning in the past and in the future. What's the meaning of her parents' clasped hands? What does it mean to drink green tea? Why do people we barely knew sometimes come to mean so much to us? So much meaning in the small details of everyday life.
It's a great book for a book group to read - if you're like me, you will be dying to talk about it with friends as soon as you finish it. It's the best thing I've read this year, and I read a lot.

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Eye openingReview Date: 2008-06-20
**starred review**Review Date: 2007-03-14
Ilse, her older brother Erich, and their mother and father have come to the awful realization that Austria is no place for a Jewish family. It is time to get out, but to where? There is only one possible place, Japanese occupied China--or Shanghai. At first, conditions are tolerable. As the political situation deteriorates and the United States enters the war, the immigrant population is imprisoned in a ghetto where the inhabitants have to deal with near starvation and an odious, cruel, but eccentric keeper of the gate. But it is the relationship that develops between Ilse and the little Chinese street-boy, Liu that make this refuge story so outstanding. Filled with daring resistance activities in which she and her brother participate, and inhabited by wonderfully drawn characters like Ilse's parents-- once proud and proper upper class Viennese Jews who evolve realistically as their fortunes change--this book is highly recommended.
Ages 11-14.
Reviewed by Rachel Kamin
Great readReview Date: 2006-09-23
Recommended for mature readers--too old for most young children.
Shanghai Shadows by Lois RubyReview Date: 2006-09-19
Reviewed by Linda R. Silver
Association of Jewish Libraries Newsletter, Sept./Oct. 2007

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All i neededReview Date: 2008-03-10
Cross CulturalReview Date: 2007-01-09
how silk came westReview Date: 2006-04-12
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 aliveReview Date: 2007-05-07
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.

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Accurate and VERY readableReview Date: 1998-04-07
Wonderful bookReview Date: 2001-02-26
Wonderful book.Review Date: 2001-02-26
EXCELLENT! Reads like a good novel.Review Date: 1998-04-13
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Jewish Shanghai and MoreReview Date: 2008-04-08
Krasno was born in Shanghai in 1923 to stateless Russian Jewish parents. Krasno lived there her entire life until expats were forced out of China in 1945. The author includes detailed, yet concise, background information--including newspaper articles and some Japanese propaganda pieces--about issues that affected her daily life during this era and her reactions to the world around her. She tries to puzzle out the truth behind the propaganda and figure out what is the real status of the war, for example. She also attempts to illustrate how the lives of the various groups of people in Shanghai intersected and how the ways in which people interacted changed.
Although the book focuses on the war years of 1942 to 1945, she provides other interesting information as well. One of the worthwhile tangents Krasno provides is the story of her parents' emigration. Her father, David Rabinovich, left Russian for Siberia, and then went on to Harbin. As the Russian Jews picked up their lives again in Harbin, they began to suffer hardships at the hands of White Russian Fascists and the Japanese. Eventually, Rabinovich and many other Jews left Harbin to try their luck in the more tolerant city of Shanghai. There, Rabinovich met and married his wife and became the editor of a Russian Jewish newspaper called Our Life. He also served as the honorary secretary of the Shanghai Ashkenazi Jewish community. Krasno's mother owned a children's dress and toy shop called Peter Pan. Luckily, during Ghettoization this little shop kept the family fed. One of the fun anecdotes about the store involves writer and personality Emily Hahn, who shopped there for clothing for her pet gibbon.
Other notable side stories include the history of the Opium trade, the background of the Bund, and the story of Jewish immigrant Silas Hardoon and his impact on the city.
Although the book deals with a difficult time in Shanghai's history, Krasno's account maintains a lighthearted, youthful exuberance. Despite the air raid sirens and bombs going off around her, food shortages, and other hardships of wartime, young Rena remains determined to pursue her education and insists on having as much fun as is humanly possible under these unusual conditions. Fortunately, she wrote down all of these elements of her life in Shanghai for us to contemplate in the 21st Century.
Strangers Always is a quick and satisfying read. I found it better than some of the other war time memoirs for its style, tone, and level of details. The book will appeal, of course, to readers interested in the history of Jews in Shanghai, but also to readers interested in WWII era Shanghai or immigrant life during the boom years in general.
different view of the second world warReview Date: 2003-04-19
different view of the second world warReview Date: 2003-04-19
Eye-witness account of the end of imperialism in Shanghai.Review Date: 1997-07-21
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