Asian Books


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

Asian
Food of Burma: Authentic Recipes from the Land of the Golden Pagodas (Periplus World Food Series)
Published in Hardcover by Periplus Editions (2000-06-15)
Author: Claudia Saw Lwin
List price: $18.95
Used price: $70.82

Average review score:

Cuisines from the Land of The Golden Pagodas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-21
This is an excellent cookbook for Burmese food. It not only contains numerous authentic recipes but it also has explanations on Burmese history, traditions, cooking methods, and Burmese ingredients. Recipes are easy to follow and illustrated with colorful pictures. I am from Burma (now living in US) and found the dishes in the book to be a genuine Burmese food. Recipes are not westernize like in many other Asian cook books. If you are a Burmese in overseas or a fan of exotic food, this is definitely a must have book.

pretty pictures
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-28
This is a cookbook I probably wouldn't have bought it I had been able to flip through its pages before hand. I always avoid cookbooks with color pictures of all the food since color photos seem to always mean they are trying to distract you from other problems. Since Amazon gave me a great discount on it with another book I was considering getting, I went for it. In the end, I'm not dissappointed.

The first 36 pages are info about Burma, and I must admit the color photographs are all excellent. The recipes call for a lot of ingredients that are hard to come by in the small town where I live (small enough that butter is sometimes hard to come by), but they also look great. They are layed out well, and are easy to read. Some ingrediants have alternatives, but not nearly enough to make this usable by people who don't live in metropolitan area with specialty stores.

Great Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-25
I am Burmese and I bought this book so I could cook the food of my country. Everything is very authentic and reminds me of home!

Highly recommended for fans of spicy Asian dishes!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-04
Burmese cookbooks are hard to come buy: there are relatively few in print, and this joins only a handful of competitors to bring the food of Burma to the modern kitchen. Fine color photos of completed dishes supplement dishes which do require access to an Oriental market, but which are surprisingly easy to produce. Fans of spicy Asian dishes will welcome this Burmese presentation.

Awesome Burmese Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-26
This is an excellent cookbook for Burmese food. It not only contains numerous authentic recipes but it also has explanations on Burmese history, traditions, cooking methods, and Burmese ingredients. Recipes are easy to follow and illustrated with colorful pictures. I am from Burma (now living in US) and found the cuisines in the book to be a genuine Burmese food. Recipes are not westernize like in many other Asian cook books. If you are a Burmese in overseas or a fan of exotic food, this is definitely a must have book

Asian
From Bangkok to Bali in 30 Minutes: 165 Fast and Easy Recipes with the Lush, Tropical Flavors of Southeast Asia and the South Seas Islands
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Common Press (2003-06-25)
Author: Therese Volpe Laursen
List price: $29.95
New price: $9.95
Used price: $5.44

Average review score:

THE BEST book in my kitchen
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-13
I have savored so many recipes from this book. I absolutely amaze my dinner guests with the recipes!

Great book with simple, straightforward recipes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-18
I find myself reaching for this book quite a bit. I've made quite a few recipes from here with great success; the flavors are fresh, bright and bold, and many of the recipes are inherently healthy. There's great stuff here for weeknight meals, but some of them are still nice enough for casual company dinners. This is not an entirely authentic cookbook, but it's still all very tasty. If you don't have an Asian market locally (or large Asian section at your local mega-mart) you might find some of the ingredients hard to source, although that's not a problem for me being in the Seattle metropolitan area. Make sure you try their recipe for Saigon cinnamon ice cream - it's foolproof and to die for.

best $15 spent, if you like to cook, and enjoy Thai food, etc.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-05
Have you ever purchased a colorful asian cook book from the discount bin at the local bookstore, to find it's all pretty photos, but otherwise filled with aimless, unremarkable yet needlessly complicated or unclear recipes? I have.. to the point that most of my cooking involves going online, to find at least 3 recipes for whatever I have in mind that evening, and to use the best parts of each found recipe to come up with my own.. Well, I need to do so no more so far as Southeast Asia is concerned, thanks to the Laursens wonderful, concise, yet roomy-enough-to-allow-me-to-experiment recipes. As my wife knows, i HATE following recipes, as most 'exotic' recipes usually call for at least ONE vital mystery ingredient I will never stock, so I usually end up chucking the recipe and instead blaze thru my own rebellious trail. Well, the Laursens allow me the breathing room to make substitutions, letting me know which ingredients are key, and why, and how to make do when you don't have them all, and it's all very reassuring, aiming primarily at providing a basic, straightforward foundation for south east Asian cooking. Food the locals eat, yet with just the right amount of westernization, this book was written for me.. No wild look-at-me recipes that you will either make once and never again or not dare to make at all.... I was such a geek I took the book to my local asian supermarket and was found in the sauces/spices aisle thumbing thru pages to make sure I knew which soy sauces/fish sauces/chilli pastes to weed thru... Enough of my quirks.. the recipes? I've had this book but two days, and have made 2 meals, that will make my local thai/vietnamese restaurants sadly miss a good chunk of my business, as they came out flawless; amazingly so, given the simplicity and conciseness of the recipes...Again, best $15 spent.

Southern Girl in Colorado
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-30
This book is fantastic. It is practicle and easy to use. It convinced me to make my first attempt at homemade Thai and it was contagious. Our friends loved the recipes (they usually eat Mexican) and now love thai dishes. I need MORE receipes, please do another cookbook, and thanks!

Culinary diversity and ethnic meal-time authenticity
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-06
From Bangkok To Bali In 30 Minutes: 175 Fast And Easy Recipes With The Lush, Tropical Flavors Of Southeast Asia is the collaborative effort of Theresa Volpe Laursen and Byron Laursen. This exciting compilation of exotic dishes ranges from Vietnamese-Style Iced Coffee; Balinese Star Fruit, Papaya, and Pink Grapefruit Salad with Avocado Dressing; and Fried Spring Rolls Filipino Style; to Bangkok-to-Bali Burgers with Grilled Onions; Laotian-Style Stir-Fried Shrimp with Crispy Lemon Grass; and Filipino-Style Potatoes Adobo. Exceptionally "kitchen cook friendly", From Bangkok To Bali In 30 Minutes is especially recommended for both its culinary diversity and ethnic meal-time authenticity.

Asian
From Cyrus to Alexander: A History of the Persian Empire
Published in Hardcover by Eisenbrauns (2002-01-01)
Author: Pierre Briant
List price: $65.00
New price: $75.53

Average review score:

Great!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-25
Pierre Briant's book "From Cyrus to Alexander: A History of the Persian Empire" is probably the best book on the Persian Empire thus far. Pierre Briant use not only the western sources but also the eastern sources on the Persian Empire. He painstaking pieces together just about every bit of info on the Persian Empire to give the reader a panorama view of their culture. If you are intrested in the History of Persia this is a great book have on the book shelf!

rich and wonderful text
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-10
This book is one of the best books on this subject and it covers rise and fall of Achaemenid Empire in details. Pierre Briant has showed his ability to use his extensive research to seek the truth about this great civilisation and he has examined Babylonian inscriptions and Egyptian documents to support it.
The theory of decadence of Persian Empire was introduced by some scholars and it has dominated the
Studies of ancient Persia but this book gives us an opportunity to study new evidence and to overcome the Hellenocentric view which has infiltrated Iranian studies.
I salute Pierre Briant for his dedication and love for Iranian history and for giving us such a valuable
Book and I recommend this book to readers with passion for Iranian history and to those who seek the truth about the past.

Iran
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-21
This book is discussing pre-Islamic era of Iran. This book is discussing founder of Iran Zamin Cyrus the Great who found daynasty of Hakhamanishian. This dynasty came to an end by invasion of Alexandra.

Herodotus Overcome
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-15
Arguably, western historical tradition started with Herodotus trying to tell the story of the vast Persian Empire to the East of the Greek city states. Since then, western history of Persia has always been written from a Greek perspective, which was biased with a strong propagandist agenda.

Pierre Briant has sought to overcome this long-ingrained Greco-centric view of the Persian empire through a very detailed & deeply analytical history which integrates all existing knowledge on the first full-scale Empire in Southwest Asia. Writing originally in French in mid-90s, Briant approaches this history with 1) an analytical approach to the political narrative which seeks to lay bare the ideological elements ingrained in the Greek texts and 2) a sweeping overview of the politico-socio-economical organization of the vast Empire built on evidence verified on local levels. What emerges clearly was the Persian Empire as a viable politico-economical super-structure that layered on top of deep-rooted local traditions. The Empire infrastructure sustained for the 200 years that the classical Greek culture flourished, and that this infrastructure was inherited-- though not sustained-- by Alexander and his companions through conquest.

This is a heavy tome as Briant tried to overcome a very deep-rooted academic historiographical tradition, so at times the writing can be tedious. Also, this book does not seek to cover Zoroastrianism at all (beyond describing the royal Achaemenid ideology which the author neither identifies nor disscoiates with Zoroastrianmism). However, the freshness in perspectives, plus the very well-rendered, top quality translation, makes the book a truly 'value-for-money' purchase in my view.

Achaemenid Persia
Helpful Votes: 33 out of 39 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-19
Dear Friends,

This book is not light reading for the casual dilletante, it is a scholarly book by a world renowned author who has produced the last book to be writted on the Achaeminid Persian Empire pending the discovery of a huge new archive of inscribed tablets that will provide a new book A NEW LOOK AT THE PERSIAN EMPIRE: THE X CUNEIFORM TABLET ARCHIVES.

I took a course on the Achaemenid Persian Empire from Professor Pierre Briant when he was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute in 1997 when I was in graduate studies in ancient history there. He is fully conversant in every piece of literature and archaeological evidence on the subject.

Be prepared for a lot of reading, the book is 1196 pages long,everything is referenced. The actual text starts on page 13 and ends on page 876, the other 300 pages are research notes, pages 977 to page 1050. There are indexes on personal names and topics. The Bibliography is from page 1059 to page 1124, a full 65 pages!

Those of you interested in numismatics will be sorely disappointed unless you have been unable to find a convenient genealogical table of the Achaemenid Dynasty

My own interest at the present time is in anceint weapons, also an area that is not covered by this book. I for one would like to see a book titled ARMS AND ARMAMENT OF THE ANCIENT ACHAEMENID PERSIAN EMPIRE that would illustrate swords, daggers, spears, missile weapons, armor, helmets, horse trappings, chariots and anything else in the field.

If you share my interest in ancient weapons, please feel free to join http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ancientweapons or emai me at jpisc98357@aol.com. For those of you interested in a broader based discussion of anceint Iran, there has been a new discussion group formed. Go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Iranica-L There is not yet any content to the group which has staked out the eras from pre history until the Muslim conquest in the 7th Century.
There is a good site if you are interested in the Parthians at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Parthia-L The participants of this group are heavily into numismatics.

This book is not a good source for artifact studies, there are no photographs at all and the iconography illustrated is all done with line drawings. The maps are adequate but are not plentiful.

For those interested in a supplement to this book that will give you a real taste of what the Empire's captial looked like, I would recommend Persepolis Recreated, a book and DVD that reconstructs the great palaces of Persepolis using modern graphics technology. It is available for $85. from the producer, Farzin Rezaeian. Call (708)386-2720 to place your order.

Best regards, John Piscopo

Asian
From Pusan to Panmunjom: Wartime Memoirs of the Republic of Korea's First Four-Star General
Published in Paperback by Potomac Books Inc. (1999-11-01)
Author: Paik Sun Yup
List price: $17.95
New price: $7.00
Used price: $6.99
Collectible price: $17.95

Average review score:

Great look at the Korean Side of the conflict
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-19
I really enjoyed reading this book by probably the most celebrated Korean General of all time. While it is true that the Korean Army wasn't usually up to the standards of the American Army, Paik's units always seemed to be pretty close in every history of the war. Highly recommended book for anyone that wants to learn more about the Korean War.

Same War, Different Angle.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-28
This is a fairly important book to anyone interested in the Korean War. General Yup was South Korea's first four star general and was a field commander of various units during the war.

What makes this book important is that it covers the same war as many other books, but that it is written not from an American viewpoint but from the view of a soldier whose country was being attacked. This has made the Association of the United States Army (AUSA) through its Institute for Land Warfare put this title on their list of books that should be kept in print for study by AUSA members and others concerned about important issues.

This book was first published in 1992, the copies being sold by Amazon are reprints of the original book.

Excellent memoir and very insightful
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-25
This is an excellent autobiography. The General's career and development is amazing to have reached 4-Stars at such a young age. His modesty and emphasis on the South Korean Army's development into a complete military organization while at war is remarkable.
What makes this book sobering is when the General describes how thousands of South Koreans volunteered and were sent straight into combat with little training, only to quickly become casualties themselves, sacrificing their lives for their country. Another key item from the General's writing is how only after having the time to fully train, equip, and organize into Divisions with adequate firepower, were they able to successfully conduct offensive operations.
Bravery and courage helped them hold against the North Korean Communist attack along the desperate Pusan perimeter, but it was the firepower of the attached US artillery units that were supporting his South Korean Division that allowed them to counterattack successfully and reach Panmunjom.
The personal family dangers in war is also brought out where he writes about his family, who had to be left behind in Seoul, unable to flee when the North Koreans captured the city. The additional suffering of the civilian populace is also described in this book, caught trying to flee the Communist Army.
Highly recommended reading for the South Korean view of the war. Excellent insight into how important it is to have trained and properly equipped soldiers when fighting a war rather than relying on conscripted soldiers after war has started as the conscripted soldiers will suffer excessive casualties and deaths when fighting against a motivated, trained, and fully armed enemy.

A different perspective on the war in Korea
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-15
General Paik's work stands out among the many works on the Korean War because of his focus on the operations of the Republic of Korea (ROK) forces. Highly recommended to readers looking for information that goes beyond the American contributions to the struggle. The operational details and accounts of the interaction of American and ROK commanders are fascinating. The book suffers slightly from a lack of detailed maps that assist readers in following the movements of the oppossing forces.

The Korean War from the neglected South Korean Perspective
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-05
I'm glad I found this gem of a book. I've read more then a few Korean War books and they take a decidedly American point of view. It's not to say that this is wrong, but it's certainly unbalanced. Many of these other books go on to describe the ROK army as cowardly, unreliable and prone to breaking. Finally there is a Korean commander that puts the record straight.

Yes, it was true that the ROK army at the time were not up to American Army standards, but it's not fair to put the same expectations on them. It doesn't take a genius to know what happens when militia goes against a heavily equipped professional army head-to-head in the open field. Militia loses every time, just look at how the British man handled continental armies in the first few years of the Revolutionary War. In 1950 the ROK army was the equivalent of a militia as it was very much under equipped, with no armor, air force and very little artillery (some 60mm and 80mm mortars and a few light 105mm pieces).

The U.S. had purposely left the ROK army under equipped and it was designed from the ground up as a lightly armed anti-guerilla force. The ROK army had a very poor junior officer corps, there was not school to train junior officers. The U.S. was too preoccupied in rebuilding Japan and sent very limited funds to South Korea. Proper equipment was not sent, no school for junior officers was established. Anyone who knows something about military matters knows that the backbone of an effective army are the junior officers, the lieutenants, captains and majors that lead the troops into the teeth of enemy fire. The North Korean Army (NKA), on the other hand, had an effective junior officer corps because many of the veterans were anti-Japanese guerilla fighters. Furthermore, the Russians supplied NKA with T-34 tanks, YAK fighter bombers, 155mm artillery, etc. Heavy artillery, tanks and close air support gave the NKA heavy offensive power.

It is not mentioned very often, but American trooped faired NO BETTER against the NKA during the first few months of the war. 24th ID troops ran from their positions when their antiquated WWII era bazookas just scratched the paint off NKA T-34s. It was carrier based air power that saved the Americans from being overrun.

General Paik tells stories of desperate battles, where ROK soldiers wrapped satchel charges around their bodies and threw themselves in suicide missions onto NKA tanks. ROK soldiers did the best they could with the weapons and training they had on hand. General Paik provides a fair and often underappreciated reason for why ROK units faired badly in the early part of the Korean War. As far as I'm concerned, any student of the Korean War cannot consider himself a expert unless he's read Paik's book. It is wrong to not put into consideration the viewpoint of the nation that contributed the most manpower and had the most casualties of all the UN forces. No Korean War library can be considered complete without this book (how many Korea War books have a glowing foreword by Mathew B. Ridgeway himself, huh?).

General Paik Sun Yup was the 29 year old commander of the ROK 1st division. The 1st ROK division had the distinction of the only ROK unit that never retreated from their positions without orders. It was also the only ROK unit that was attached to a U.S. Army Corp for the duration of the war and given tasks expected of a regular U.S. infantry division. General Paik was adamant about the fact that given the proper artillery, armor and air support, the 1st ROK division always performed as well, if not better then any regular U.S. infantry division. The 1st ROK also had the distinction of being the first UN unit to enter Pyongyang, beating several better equipped U.S. units in the race to the NK capital.

Asian
Ghost Fleet: The Sunken Ships of Bikini Atoll
Published in Hardcover by University of Hawaii Press (1996-12)
Author: James P. Delgado
List price: $31.95
Used price: $99.74

Average review score:

A fascinating look into the bomb testing and aftermath
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-10
This book presents an illuminating look at the nuclear testing and it's aftermath. The cavalier attitude towards radiation is pretty amazing. There are also many fine pictures of the wrecks underwater, including some shots of the world's only exisiting diveable aircraft carrier.

Excellent follow-up
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-30
My Dad was there (USS Reclaimer) - swimming in the atoll the day after the blasts, cleaning refuged ships, etc. It's amazing he's still alive.

Nice photos; good summaries. This isn't a full-blown account of Operation CrossRoads but a nice summary of the ships. If you are interested in OC, this is a good book to have on your shelf.

Highly readable and entertaining
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-13
I found this book to be most interesting, with a very accessible writing style.

Fascinating and Absorbing
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-27
This is a great mini-coffee table book (get the hardcover if you REALLY dig this stuff!) offering hours of information and photos of the famous atomic bomb tests on naval ships at Bikini Atoll. The 190 page book is broken into nine chapters and has excellent notes on sources. Background information covers the first half of the book while the second is focused on recent dives to many of the famous and lesser known ships that were sunk here. The writing is very informative and the photographs are absolutely haunting, particularly the ones of the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga! Several color photos are included in the center. The author pushes no agenda in this book. He merely reports the facts available both "good and bad".

Wreck-Diving Nirvana
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-16
James Delgado does a very good job of reviewing the sunken ships of Bikini Atoll and telling the story of the 1946 atomic bomb tests. I read this book after diving at Bikini Atoll and found it to be a good treatment of a topic that has received too little attention. As far as wreck diving goes, Bikini Atoll is the best in the world, and my only disappointment with this book is that it does not fill the need for a coffee-table-style photographic survey of the incredible shipwrecks at Bikini. That being said, Delgado's book is a nice compromise between such a coffee table book and the more comprehensive historical treatment in Jonathan Weisgall's superb book on Bikini Atoll.

Asian
Global Future : The Next Challenge for Asian Business
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (2005-05-09)
Authors: Arnoud DeMeyer, Peter Williamson, Frank-Jürgen Richter, and Pamela C. M. Mar
List price: $24.95
New price: $11.49
Used price: $11.50

Average review score:

state-of-the art
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-17
A great contribution. Illustrates how to build global firms that create value. Pragmatic, with interesting new insights from Asia. If you are a CEO, take up the challenge - use this book

a real breakthrough
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-20
This volume provides dramatic insight into how Asian companies are developing their global strategies. Foreward looking and highly international, this volume privides breakthrough analysis and recommendations. I liked Samsung's case in particular.

Asian firms seek known brands to go global
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-30
a very timely book. Lenovo, SAIC, Benq, TCL, CNOOC - they are all bidding for European or American firms. And they are right to do so. These deals will propel them on the forefront of international business.

Thoughtful, organized and impactful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-23
Global Future is a world-class book - an excellent guide to global strategy. While the argument is at times very dense and tightly written, it is also very clearly and succinctly put together for corporate executives to follow. The authors understand the real world - the complexities and challenges firms face when they address global opportunities. The author's treatment of global issues is not just worth the reading, but a book you will want to keep within reach from your desk.

Timely and provocative
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-14
The authors give extraordinary insight into the challenging environment in which Asian business leaders operate today. Rigorously researched, this is the indispensable guide to corporate globalization.

Asian
The Great Chinese Revolution 1800-1985
Published in Paperback by Harper Perennial (1987-10-09)
Author: John King Fairbank
List price: $16.95
New price: $4.97
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

Refreshing Storytelling
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-19
If there's one book that I could recommend to the general reader on the history of modern China (i.e. from circa 1800-1985), it would be this book.

To be honest, my first impression of this book is not a very good one in the sense that I did not feel like dancing in joy. This is because the book appears to me to be too simple, lacks good facts and not very scholarly. How could Fairbank write such a book? My expectations were very high or to be precise, I have expected the wrong things. This book is not intended to be scholarly, not intended to bog you down with boring details but is intended to be entertaining and at the same time have enough facts to highlight certain important events.

I bought this book only on a second visit to the bookshop and perhaps due to a change of mood, I find the book entertaining and at the same time enlightening in that it proposes different views on events that have not been considered before. For example, the discussion on the port of Hankow was quite enlightening. This is refreshing and after understanding the intentions of the book, my perception and expectations changed and I was able to see it in a new way. Since then, this has been one of my favourite books on modern Chinese history and will become a benchmark for me to measure good historical storytelling.

Compared to Jonathan Spence's "In Search of Modern China" this book appears to me be more entertaining and in a way, more intelligent. Highly recommended.

Fairbank's Crowning Glory
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 1997-10-08
No decent individual who wants to talk about China, or wants to understand Chinese history in the last 150 years, can skip anything written by Fairbank. If there's anybody who can claim to be 'the' authority on China, Fairbank would be the one. And this work is his crowning glory, culmunating in a tour de force after research in this field for more than half a century. This work sees China's history from the late Qing period till the Post-Mao era as one huge struggle -- for modernity, for survival, for progress. If you are not convinced that China is agreat nation, read this and you'll change your mind, thanks to the late Fairbank.

Erudition -- Plain and Simple
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-13
Professor Fairbank is one of the most insightful individuals who have written on China. His attention to detail -- particularly the historical process of cause and effect -- helps the reader gain a good overall picture of China as a vibrant, living organism -- an active player in the global scene. Seeing that China is becoming more and more important, it is becoming not only fashionable but important for an intellectual in the West to know something about China. This book is a good starting point.

Very interesting interpretation
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-12
I wouldn't read this book as an introduction to Chinese history of this period. Fairbank's China: A New History, or several other general histories, are better for that. This book is Fairbank's argument that the development of Chinese history was far less heavily influenced by the West than most historians and Westerners believe. He convincingly puts the major interactions between China and the West in Chinese contexts, noting the similarities between Taipei Rebellion and the White Lotus Rebellion, for instance, although the latter event occurred when Western influence was much less. It's unfortunate that this topic is so politicized. Whether China was heavily or lightly influenced by the West should have no bearing on the inherent moral worth of the Chinese people, although many people on both sides of the debate don't see it that way. Nevertheless, Fairbank's topic is interesting in itself. Ultimately, I didn't find him fully convincing (not that I'm an expert), but I'm glad I read his book.

Highly readable and authentic
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-25
I got this book for the specific purpose of studying China's secular civil wars -- the White Lotus Rebellion (1796-1805), the Taiping Rebellion (1851-64), and the civil war that began with Mao's Long March (1934), culminating in the Great Leap Forward (1959).

Each of these civil wars resulted in massive bloodshed, including executions and famine, and was settled with compromises that lasted only a few decades, leading to the next civil war. This is important today, because the compromises forced on Mao after his disastrous and bloody Great Leap Forward are unraveling today, as peasants are losing their farms and their livelihoods and flooding into the cities. When a future economic downturn occurs, these peasants will be unemployed, with no infrastructure to support them, providing fertile ground for a new rebellion, possibly led by followers of the Falun Gong. This could happen any time in the next 10-15 years.

Fairbank's informal style presents the details of these and other historical events in an enjoyable manner and from a Chinese and China-centric point of view, rather than from the typical America-centric point of view used by other writers. The result is both enjoyable and authentic, and gives us the historical background to understand the revolutionary changes going on in China today.

Asian
Great Fool: Zen Master Ryokan : Poems, Letters, and Other Writings
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Hawaii Pr (1996-05)
Author: Ryokan
List price: $49.00

Average review score:

Exquisite hardcover binding with well rendered translations.
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-14
This beautiful cloth covered book brings Ryokan to life. An extensive biography helps place him firmly in the lineage of zen fools. His poetry is well rendered, cutting to the heart of his enlightenment, his lonely village. Some of the preface seems a bit misplaced and foolish, attempting to address the question of whether he was 'enlightened,' with deep and silly consideration of his views relative the deconstructionist movement. But his skill as calligrapher and poet are well treated: the beauty of his poetry is not random! If you can afford it, the hardcover's worth the extra bucks because of the sweet binding, really a nice book to hold in your hands.

The Best....
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-04
I discovered Ryokan around 20 years ago when I took out "One robe, one bowl" from the library. Since then I've bought that and most of the other English translations that have appeared. I finally gave in and spent the extra bucks to buy this one and have been thoroughly impressed and glad with my purchase. Not only does it contain more of his poetry than the other collections, but it also contains some superb biographical and critical essays. If you want to know more about this wonderful poet and person, this is THE book to get. I would hope every library in America would purchase it as well. Although I'm sure Ryokan would find this rather amusing, I can't help but call this the "Cadillac of Ryokan anthologies." A fantastic book!!

The Method to Ryokan's Great Foolishness
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-13
Something about Ryokan just captures the imagination. An eccentric Zen monk living in a hut in the mountains, dashing off fine poetry and refined calligraphy after making the rounds in the towns below with his begging bowl, playing ball with the kids and sipping sake with the farmers along the way. Living a life free of the many conventions and responsibilities that hem us in, Ryokan seems to speak directly to us with a straightforward, friendly, unpretentious eloquence. Apparently this is a voice we find greatly appealing, and there are a great number of fine books about him and his poetry in English.

Still, of these, "Great Fool: Zen Master Ryokan" really stands out as an excellent scholarly treatment of Ryokan and his art. Special attention is given to the nature of his religious orientation and his place in late Tokugawa literary society. His relationships with sponsors and fellow literati (of both Confucian, Kokugaku, and Buddhist persuasions) are fleshed out through translations of his letters, his role and image in local society exemplified by Kera Yoshishige's firsthand biography (one of the earliest), and his strict Soto Zen religiosity are revealed in several sermonistic essays on Buddhism--these latter especially reveal a very different Ryokan, strident and very critical of the state of institutional Buddhism in his day, erudite in the difficult writings of Dogen and the canonical Mahayana sutras, whose practice of seclusion and begging turn out to be highly unusual in his own context and thus a very intentional manifesto of his firmly-held religious principles. And of course there are the poems, lots and lots of them, both kanshi and waka, all of which have been specially selected with a view to shedding light on many of these same questions--for what they tell us about Ryokan the literatus, Ryokan the local weirdo, Ryokan the Soto Zen monk, and hence Ryokan the man living during late Tokugawa Japan.

The three scholarly essays at the beginning of the book by Haskel and Abe outline these same themes as well as discussing perceptions of Ryokan in modern and contemporary Japan, his role as a kind of household name and folkloric culture hero and the very divergent academic takes on him by his different Japanese interpreters. Much consideration is given too to the evolution of Ryokan studies over time and of the nature and reliability of the sources we use to understand him. All of this makes this book extremely useful, almost indispensable really, for anyone who wants to study Ryokan in-depth, and this more than makes up for the fact that the translations of the poems themselves seem just a tad prosaic sometimes. Highly recommended to anyone interested in late Tokugawa Buddhism and its relation to literature as well as to all diehard Ryokan fans, of course.

The essential Zen poet
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-11
Ryokan,a great zen monk who dubbed himself"the great fool" is one of the most revered figures in all Japan. As a wandering begging monk{one robe, a bowl and walking stick} Ryokan celebrates the quotidian,whether a stong pot of tea, sake,playing ball with village children,or the warming embers of a dying fire in the midst of Winter,he makes these images come alive,with vibrancy and suppleness. This volume conatins remembrances of Ryokan from contemporaries,disciples,students and those he met along the way. Along with his Reflections on Buddhism,this volume also contains a very helpfulessay, a poetics of mendicancy by ryuichi abe`,and another essay by ab`,commemorating ryokan. the introductory essay by peter haskel, ryokan of mount kugami puts ryokan in his historical perpective. However, above all, it is the pure airy poetry of the master himself.Cleansing and wonderful...

The Great Life of a Great Fool
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-01
"Great Fool" is the best English source I've found for Ryokan's poems and life history. When I feel a bit overwhelmed, I always turn to Ryokan and his simple and direct approaches to life.

"Great Fool" starts off with three essays that deal with (among other things) Ryokan's modern popularity and the debate whether Ryokan was an enlightened Zen man. This last topic I found greatly interesting, especially his being coopted by Marxist thinkers who saw in him a failed zennist and bitter poet.

Next is a collection of stories of Ryokan's life and the poems, Kanshi poems written in Chinese and shorter Waka poems written in Japanese. Ryokan shares alot of spirit with Han-shan, or Cold Mountain, except that Ryokan's poetry seems livelier and more personable than Cold Mountain's, though this could be a result of the translations. It also could be the result of Ryokan's constant association with people - indeed, like a Bodhisattva, Ryokan never really left the world. Instead of running from inquirers with shreiks and giggles, Ryokan delightfully pulls a rubber playing ball from his sleeve.

The book ends with a collection of letters and essays written by Ryokan, which give a great insight into his daily life. I especially like how he ends some of his letters:

That's all.
Ryokan

Enjoy! That's all.

Asian
The Great Moghuls
Published in Hardcover by Jonathan Cape (1971-10-07)
Author: Bamber Gascoigne
List price:
New price: $106.93
Used price: $6.00
Collectible price: $16.00

Average review score:

The Beauty and the Grandeur
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-15
The first advice I would give to anyone interested in Bamber Gascoigne's THE GREAT MOGHULS would be, "Buy it in the hardcover edition, even if you have to buy it used." I once owned a brand-new hardcover edition and was foolish enough to sell it. Later I found that it was no longer in print. Reading a paperback library edition, I could really see the difference. There was the same excellent text by Bamber Gascoigne, but the gorgeous photographs by his wife, Christina-- many in full color-- were missing. This is a great defect for any book on the Great Moghuls, because this dynasty was particularly rich in art and architecture. Moghul miniatures combine the vivid hues, attention to detail and exotic flavor of both Hindu Indian and Persian miniatures with the realism of sixteenth-century Western art. As for Moghul architecture-- well of course everyone knows about the Taj Mahal, one of the world's great wonders, and the culmination of a long tradition of excellence.

Equally interesting is the personalities of the Moghuls. One is led through the founder of the dynasty, Babur, who transformed his family from mere descendants of the merciless Jhengiz Khan and Tamerlane (the word "Moghul" is a corruption of "Mongol") to a leading agent of civilization in central Asia and later India. One thing Babur kept from his background was a love for the outdoors: thus he preferred to sleep in tents rather than palaces, and this led to the design of gardens which set a beautiful precedent for later Moghul achievements. More surprising for a man of such background was his love of the written word, for he wrote (or to be more precise, dictated) his own biography and thus set another precendent to be followed by his heirs. It is fortunate that he came under the influence of Persian culture, for it above all others had thrown off the ban on the depiction of human and animal forms which limited Islamic art elsewhere. The result was to be stunning. He was succeeded in power by his son, Humayun, to whom he left his greatest conquest, Hindustan. Humayun was a dissolute fellow who is best remembered as the father of the greatest Moghul, Akbar, of whom more later. As it strengthened its hold upon India, the Moghul Dynasty grew more cultivated until it reached its aesthetic height in the reigns of Jahangir and Shah Jahan, whose love for his wife Mumtaz Mahal inspired the Taj. Sadly, the dynasty was to end with a dour bigot, Aurangzeb, but his reign only represented a reaction to the tolerance and flowering of culture that his predecessors had presided over.

If the Gascoignes' book has a defect, it is its tendency to slight the greatest Moghul, Akbar. Unfortunately, they provide little information about or pictures of him, although such exist, and even give the wrong birthdate for him, October 15, which is the date officially assigned by courtiers fearful of hostile astrologers, not the real one which was a month later. This neglect of the dynasty's most memorable character is no doubt due to Bamber Gascoigne's own preference for Akbar's son, Salim, who assumed the name Jahangir or "Seizer of the World" on his ascension to the Peacock Throne. Jahangir is indeed a fascinating character, possessing an almost Western scientific curiosity and keenly interested in every detail of the natural world, which he recorded, often with illustrations by court painters, in his diary. Unfortunately he was also a sadist. Cruel punishments were standard practice in those times, and not only in the East-- as Queen Elizabeth herself had people drawn and quartered, one can hardly expect a 16th Century execution to end in mere beheading or a quick hanging. But the pleasure Janhangir took in devising and watching punishments in which people were tortured to death makes him repugnant to this reader.

How different was his father, who, as the biographer Vincent Smith says, never took pleasure in cruelty. Akbar was a contradictory ruler, athletic and warlike, with a fierce temper, yet also an unusual degree of compassion for his time, sensitivity to beauty, and a deeply mystical nature. He is above all remarkable for his religious toleration. Gascoigne notes Akbar's increasing hostility to the tyranny of the mullahs, who alone had the right to determine the correct way of doing everything in a medieval Islamic state. In place of their authority Akbar asserted his own. This may seem to us to violate the principle of "division of church and state", but we must remember that Akbar knew no such principle-- he only knew that under the mullahs his non-Muslim subjects-- Hindus, Parsis, Jains, and Christians-- were being oppressed. The author touches briefly upon Akbar's adoption of his own religion, the din-il-Ilahi, which he did not however attempt to force upon his subjects. He notes that Akbar was too much of a Hindu for the Muslims, and too much of a Muslim for the Hindus, without recognizing, as Smith does, that he was neither. In fact he had embraced Parsiism, perhaps the oldest scriptural religion in the world, which had first been annunciated by Zoroaster (Zarathustra) in the 12th century BCE, whose influence in the era of Mani (from whose name "Manicheanism" is taken) stretched from China to Rome, even influencing Christianity through Gnosticism, until it was suppressed as a heresy in the cruelty of the Albigensian Crusade (1209-1229 CE). Akbar worshipped the sun and fire, keeping an eternal flame as Parsis do in their fire temples. But ironically, he would have been rejected by the Parsi community of today, which, influenced by the particularism which flourishes so fatally on the Indian subcontinent and which Akbar tried to rise above, no longer accepts into their religion anyone whose father was not a Parsi.

In sum, one can say that THE GREAT MOGHULS serves up a lavish feast of fascinating history and elegant art, but for an understanding of its greatest subject, one must go elsewhere.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-03
Provides a very readable yet comprehensive view of the great Indian rulers. Provides many rich facts but does not burden the reader with too much detail. Must read.

Stupendous Work on The Most Magnificient Empire in The World
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-08
Mr. Gascoigne's work is simply the best one can have. He gives an insight into the lives of the Moghul rulers. Being someone who's not from the subcontinent, he is not overawed by the Moghul dynasty. The potrial of the figures is intimate and one can almost feel the human beings inside those great rulers. The collection and presentation of facts is so beautifully done that one has to remind himself from time to time that this is a chronicle of history, not a racy fiction novel. The facts are so well connected and documented that the real persons can almost be seen by us. Their vices and virtues are laid out and the author just places it before the readers in sequence so that they are not overwhelmed by the wealth of details this work contain. He also manages to give a very impartial and practical account of the daily lives of the rulers, their court, courtesans, wives and the administration too. It is difficult to imagine that he himself was not overawed by the grandeur and magnificence of the Moghuls. But in true professional style, he kept himself aloof and presented to the world the life of he Great Moghuls. He laid bare their wealth, gradndeur, decadence, virtues and vices. Such a great work can hardly be duplicated or surpassed. It is simply the greatest work on arguably the greatest dynasty of Indian rulers.

A Stupendous work on the most Magnificient Emperors
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-08
Mr. Gascoigne's work is simply the best one can have. He gives an insight into the lives of the Moghul rulers. Being someone who's not from the subcontinent, he is not overawed by the Moghul dynasty. The potrial of the figures is intimate and one can almost feel the human beings inside those great rulers. The collection and presentation of facts is so beautifully done that one has to remind himself from time to time that this is a chronicle of history, not a racy fiction novel. The facts are so well connected and documented that the real persons can almost be seen by us. Their vices and virtues are laid out and the author just places it before the readers in sequence so that they are not overwhelmed by the wealth of details this work contain. He also manages to give a very impartial and practical account of the daily lives of the rulers, their court, courtesans, wives and the administration too. It is difficult to imagine that he himself was not overawed by the grandeur and magnificence of the Moghuls. But in true professional style, he kept himself aloof and presented to the world the life of he Great Moghuls. He laid bare their wealth, gradndeur, decadence, virtues and vices. Such a great work can hardly be duplicated or surpassed. It is simply the greatest work on arguably the greatest dynasty of Indian rulers.

The Moghul Emperors Come Alive
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-24
This is a unique book of its kind, with the history of the Indian subcontinent stretching from Timur's attack of Delhi in 1398 to the banishment and subsequent death of Bahadur Shah in 1862. But the focus is on the glorious history of 181 years of the six great Moghuls like Babur, Humayun, Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan and Aurangazeb. The book is very detailed with their expansionist adventures and exploits, their ruthless family struggles and sporty pass-times, their patronization of arts and architecture, their devotional practices along with their virtues and vices. Over and above all that, their strategies of governance and approach to religion are in focus. Their acts of tolerance and benevolence are given due credit and their cruelties are graphically portrayed. In short the great Moghul era comes alive with the descriptive and substantially accurate account, accompanied by illustrations of 56 pages of color and 94 monochromes. Anyone interested in the history of the Indian subcontinent cannot bypass this book.

Asian
Green Mangoes and Lemon Grass: Southeast Asia's Best Recipes from Bangkok to Bali
Published in Hardcover by Tuttle Publishing (2003-12)
Author: Wendy Hutton
List price: $35.00
New price: $12.98
Used price: $11.68

Average review score:

Great Recipes!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-28
My Mom and I love this book! Only thing is, she bought it for much more money than I did through Amazon. Great Prices.

Brilliant!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-25
I love this book - it is one of my favorite cookbooks. This has delicious easy to make recipes including many variations on noodle soups, fried rice, curries, appetisers etc. The recipes taste authentic, such as the Singaporian laksa - which is as good as any I have had in Singapore
It is very modern, the recipes are trendy, and the food tastes restaurant class. After cooking out of this cookbook it is very difficult to enjoy going out for Asian meals again - much nicer to cook it yourself using this book!

Access to a well-stocked Asian grocery will be required
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-13
Access to a well-stocked Asian grocery will be required for successful appreciation of GREEN MANGOES AND LEMON GRASS; but readers with such access will find this a fine introduction to the range of Southeast Asia's dishes, from Thailand's spicy cuisine to the French influences of Vietnamese dishes. Enjoy a Mimosa Rice from Vietnam spiced with coconut milk, fish sauce, Chinese sausages and onions; or a Spicy Minced Beef from Laos with lime juice and lemon grass. Beautiful color photos abound.

Reliable and handsome
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-27
Ms. Hutton offers reliable, clear recipes in a beautiful book, with clear advice as to ingredients, combinations, and cooking techniques. Lush photographs make everything look scrumptious. Good design keeps one recipe together on one page. I have had very good results with the three recipes I have tried. I bought the hardback because I expect to be using this book often, and appreciate the author's identification of recipes that require extra time and effort--a whole chapter. Another approach I appreciate is a good use of English that is not too British, not too American--but comprehensible to both, I hope. I am an American cook but sometimes use metric measures and having both is helpful.

Fantastic book!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-18
Not only is this book beautiful to look at, the recipes produce the most delicious (and authentic tasting) food. The simple recipes are easy enough even for people who aren't that confident in the kitchen (like my spouse); the fancier ones are perfect for dinner parties. Highly recommended!


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