Books for/about - china


 

 
Armed Madhouse: Who's Afraid of Osama Wolf?, China Floats, Bush Sinks, The Scheme to Steal '08,No Child's Behind Left, and Other Dispatches from the Front Lines of th

Publisher: Dutton Adult
Authors: Greg Palast

ISBN: 0525949682
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 5
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Summary: Extensive documentation makes things clear.
As is usual for Greg Palast his diligent research makes the unbelievable truth believable. When the murderous cheating that takes place in the heights of the high stakes game of American politics is so audacious that people can literally nor believe that the Bush administration, or any human for that matter, could possibly be doing what they evidently are doing Mr. Palast comes to our rescue by presenting not only convincing evidence that you should believe your eyes and ears but makes clear the motives, rationalizations ("political philosophy") and methods behind them. He does this in a way that is entertaining enough to counter the soul numbing depression that comes with this knowledge.
Summary: Great, with one glaring omission
Contrary to an earlier reviewer's critique of Mr. Palast's prose as "flippant," I find it engagingly pithy and witty--a salubrious style for the often dismal facts presented. Altogether an excellent exposition of this regressive regime and its neofascist agenda, with one GLARING omission, thus my 4-star rating:

Nowhere in these 300+ pages is found a single reference to Israel or the American Likudniks who have exercised a powerful--some say decisive--voice in the Neocon faction. It is fairly well-known that PNAC's manifesto for American empire was in part derived from an earlier document--the "A Clean Break: A Strategy for Securing the Realm" paper written in Israel for Netanyahu. Perle, Wolfowitz and Feith have very close to the Israeli right (some holding dual passports), yet there is not a breath about these connections, or the powerful influence of AIPAC in lobbying for the Iraq invasion. In the index, "Israel" and "AIPAC" are conspicuously absent, as is the context of this parenthetical remark on pg. 132:

"Feith had created the Office of Special Plans, the neo-con's dream factory at the Pentagon. (His assistant there, Larry Franklin, later plead guilty for passing classified documents to lobbyists.)"

What lobbyists, Mr. Palast? Perhaps he originally wrote "AIPAC lobbyists," but after the barrage of anti-Semitic slander heaped on Mearsheimer and Walt, decided he'd rather not run that gauntlet. And we are left with the impression that the strategic interests of the far-right Zionists and their minions in the U.S. have had virtually no influence worth mentioning on American foreign policy in the last decade.

No, "the Jews" didn''t orchestrate it all, as the true knuckledragging anti-Semites are eager to believe, but AIPAC and its allies in the Pentagon were hardly a negligible factor in beating the war drums. Great work, Mr. Palast, but after calling Ann Coulter "gutless," (true), you might examine your own moxy before the next book. OK, I'm ready for the inevitable "anti-Semite!" flame fest now...
Summary: Just think about it
Other reviewers have highlighted the different subjects that Palast tackles - and enlightens - in this quirky but amazing book. Its principal merit is to bring clarity to topics, especially the political role of oil in today's world, that much of the mainstream media overlooks or else buys into the "standard line". And Palast seems to have the documentation to back up his theories (I love the hidden cassette recorder). This is a book that will leave you looking at the topics it examines with a new vision. So, add this to the list of "must read" books about today's world, and in particular the Bush World and America's big business/big finance interests worldwide.

Read it before Chavez is assassinated.
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Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel

Publisher: Random House Trade Paperbacks
Authors: Lisa See

ISBN: 0812968069
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 5
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Summary: Well Done Tale of Frendship
For lovers of historical fiction, this book is a must read. Lisa See provides insight into a little known, but historically and culturally significant, practice. At a time when a woman's world did not extend far beyond the confines of her home, and when social mobility was almost impossible, Lisa See creates a fascinating story of the friendship and intimacy shared by two lifelong friends. The friendship between Snow Flower and Lily is borne of deception and necessity, and even though both suffer mightily from the misunderstanding that develops between them, the relationship ultimately benefits both women greatly.
Summary: Boring
Reading this book was like watching paint dry. I don't think it's well written and the characters aren't compelling enough to even want to continue. A better alternative would be "Memoirs of a Geisha."
Summary: GRACE, STYLE AND SUPERBLY WRITTEN NOVEL
"Snow Flower and the Secret Fan" is an enchanting, touching book drawing on the permanence of friendship and culture. For me, oriental culture is as deeply fascinating and breath-taking as waking up in a land before time. Lisa See paints pictures with words, rich with history and tradition, arranged marriages, superstitions and human emotions. She has the unique ability to capture words as if taming a wild bird and holding it in her hand for the rest of us to see.

Lily marries above her status and Snow Flower beneath. The two friends are separated and exchange "nu-shu" written on a fan. The years do not diminish the love and closeness of the two women and only in Snow Flower's last days are the two united. The book is beautiful written in a graceful, poignant fashion and the message runs deep. The book flows like cool water from a stream giving the reader a clear understanding of Chinese culture.
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A Death in China (Pinnacle Crossfire Bk)

Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Authors: William D. Montalbano Carl Hiaasen

ISBN: 0523423942
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: Excellent Vintage Hiaasen
Hiaasen's work has never been so far from Florida, though it does at least make a cameo appearance. In this story, professor Thomas Stratton is on vacation in China, annoying the busybody in his tour group by eschewing nearly all its tours. When he finds out fellow professor and mentor David Wang is also in Peking, he makes plans to see him. Stratton is shocked to learn his friend is dead, a victim of "death by duck," a pithy expression for American tourists who die on vacation in China after overexerting themselves and eating too much rich Peking duck. When Wang Bin, David Wang's influential and nearly identical Chinese brother, asks Stratton to accompany David's body back to the United States, Stratton initially agrees. His casual investigation into David's death turns up a few irregularities, however, and Stratton decides to stay in China instead, setting him unwittingly on a path of danger when he gets in the way of Wang Bin's ambitious plans. That he also falls in love with Wang Bing's daughter Kangmei is his salvation in more ways than one as he is forced to face his demons from a previous, undocumented visit to China as a soldier during wartime.

Just as Stratton pieces the entire puzzle of what happened to David Wang together, instead of ending, the story takes a turn and becomes even more intriguing, holding us on the edge until the end. Though Stratton gets conked from behind and overpowered by his enemies at least once too often, this is nonetheless a gripping page-turner. Hiaasen proves again that had he not found his niche in offbeat humor, he could still have had a solid future as a thriller writer. Montalbano's skills and knowledge as a foreign correspondent also come shining through, giving a vivid picture of China's people and politics. Their writing blends seamlessly for a dark tale of mystery and secrets that unfolds on two continents. Hiaasen fans looking for humor won't find it here, but those who enjoy his plotting skills will relish this excellent book.

Summary: Not typical Hiaasen, but a good thriller
Lots of action, suspense, and mystery. A good read, well written. Not a "can't put it down", so only 4 stars. But if you're looking for something to take to the beach this summer, you could do worse.
Summary: Thrills and Intrigue Across the Pacific
Hiaasen and Montalbano again show their ability to write a thriller with twists and turns enough to satisfy most readers. Tom Stratton is a college professor on a guided tour of China. During the tour, he meets his old mentor, David Wang, brother of a deputy minister in the Chinese government. They agree to meet again, but Wang turns up missing. As Stratton tries to find his friend, he uncovers a whole snake-den of double dealing and murder involving David's brother. Immediately, Stratton becomes a target for murder, beginning with being locked in a closet with a king cobra. His desperate flight gets him back to the United States, but death follows him. You jump right in during the early chapters, and the authors never let up. All in all, a satisfying tale of intrigue and action.
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Chinese Herbal Medicine: Materia Medica, Third Edition

Publisher: Eastland Press
Authors: Dan Bensky Steven Clavey Erich Stoger Andrew Gamble Lilian Lai Bensky

ISBN: 0939616424
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: Important, but flawed?
My copy of this book is full of printing errors, including chapter summaries that are incomplete and index page numbers that are as many as two pages off. I expect much more from Eastland Press.
Summary: The Chinese medicinal products bible - required reading
At last, Bensky et al. third edition is finally out and what a vast source of knowledge it is. For anyone using Chinese medicinal products, this really is your bible. Massively expanded from the 2nd edition, there are hundreds more many medicinal products included.

Wonderfully categorised, excellently explained, beautifully illustrated and well indexed, this text allows all readers to easily source detailed information on hundred of medicinal products used in Chinese medicine.

Required reading for all Chinese medicine doctors and those wanting to learn more about Chinese medicinal products. Can't wait for Bensky et al. `Formulas and Strategies' 2nd edition!
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The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Long-term Health

Publisher: Benbella Books
Authors: PhD, T. Colin Campbell Thomas M. Campbell II John Robbins Howard Lyman

ISBN: 1932100660
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Summary: Our children are our greatest resource!
If you love your children and grandchildren then this is a book you should read! The information provided in The China Study about nutrition as the leading factor to preventing degenerative disease is compeling and based in fact, with references from over 750 papers and studies. The explosion of childhood obeasity, diabetes and other preventable afflictions, are beyond crisis! Dr. T. Colin Campbell provides conclusive evidence on how to stop them today! A must read for any parent concerned about their childs future health!
If you like this book, then check out The Truth About Caffeine: How Companies That Promote it Deceive Us and What We Can Do About It by Marina Kushner. It goes far beyond what I already knew about coffee and caffeine. My scare came years ago when I became cystic, requiring some extra doctor visits and some surgical removals in the office. During that time I read a small news item linking caffeine intake to breast cysts. At first the doctor wasn't convinced. But when I stopped my caffeine intake, my cysts disappeared. It was the only change. He became a believer. You will too so get this book.
Summary: More than just about diet
Colin Campbell presents an interesting insight into the difficulties and the rewards of providing the scientific facts without cultural, political, and economic bias. He simply but powerfully provides the readers with an understanding about statistical signifigance and the dangerous flaws that exist when reductionist science is practiced. The book is foundational and is a must read for those researchers who will be investigating diseases such as Alzheimers and MS. Colin Campbell is a revolutionary. This is one of the most significant books of our time.
Summary: Not really about the China Study....
It was a good book, very readable and engaging. However, it dealt only briefly with the China Study he helped to conduct. When he talked about his findings, he did it in a very generalised way, more to sell a "point" (eat a whole food, vegan diet) rather than to convey the nuances of his findings. This was disappointing.

However, there was some interesting (and scary) discussions about how excess protein in the blood can trigger cancer growth, and the havoc that cow's milk can wreak on children.

I'm giving the whole foods vegan diet the one month trial (as he suggests), just to see how I feel on it. He's given plenty of evidence here (through other studies, not just his own) that it can reverse diabetes, heart disease and cure obesity, and for those reasons alone, it's worth experimenting with.
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A Brief History of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations

Publisher: Wadsworth Publishing
Authors: Conrad Schirokauer Miranda Brown David Lurie Suzanne Gay

ISBN: 0534643078
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Summary: A very thorough survey of Chinese and Japanese history
This book was specifically recommened to me by a Professor at the University of Texas as a fantastic "starter" on Chinese history. A fantastic read, this college text introduces the reader to Asian civilization in a way that provides information on both the history of Japan and China, as well as a very in-depth look at the cultures which grew out of this history. As Dr. Shirokauer clearly states in his introduction, this book serves as a survey in order to give the reader a general idea on the key aspects (both historically and culturally) of both the Japenese and Chinese civilizations. Weighing in at around 650 pages, this book is a massive undertaking in historical scholarship and provides a fantastic opportunity for the reader to gain a full understanding of Asia, while still leaving the reader thirsty for more at the end. Luckily, a thorough explanations of sources and a very large additional reading section provide avenues for those interested in Asian history to pursue specific topics.

For China, this story focuses around the various dynasties which ruled that country for so long. Beginning with the most early archealogical findings available for China and continuining through the Zhou, Song, Tang, Ming, etc... For Japan, the focus centers around the central administration of Kyoto until the creation of the Shogun and the rise in prominence of Edo (located at present-day Tokyo).

One aspect of this work which so distinguishes it from other college texts on these civilizations is it's focus on the cultural aspects of these two civilizations. The author covers the evolution of art in all forms, everyday living, architecture, and religion in as detailed a fashion as he explains their history. In this way, the reader is able to see a very detailed cultural progression that stands out due to the fact that most history books only pay minor lip service to the importance of culture in a society.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in learning about a part of the world that is quickly catching up with it's Western neighbors. As countries like China and Korea begin to frequent more and more national headlines, it is important to understand the key aspects which differentiate it from the West. Not only will this knowledge better inform you of how these people live, but it will provide you with a historical perspective that explains how they got there in the first place.

Summary: Art, Literature, Religion-- fully interdisciplinary
I am Prof. of Interdisciplinary Humanities at San Francisco State and this has been classroom book of choice. Perhaps book's title should have been "a CULTURAL history of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations." A good 1/3 to 1/2 of each chapter is art, architecture, religion. For instance, "Tokugawa Japan," after four history sections, includes sections on "The Japanese Print... The Popular Theater: Kabuki and Bunraku... Popular Prose Literature... Haiku... Art and Lit after Genroku... Intellectual currents...." Pages are studded with apt illustrations. Undergrads liked though thought it pricey, but it replaced history and art books both.
Summary: Schirokauer Thorough & Entertaining
As a professor of Asian History, I have found that this text is invaluable as a learning tool for hundreds of students. It thoroughly grounds the reader in the history of Asia. Schirokauer uses narrative and analytical thinking to present Asian History in an accessible and digestible format. The book offers an essential body of information about a massive geographic area that is as diverse as it is fascinating. Each section thoroughly reviews key historical trends in a style that is interesting and a genuine good read.
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Oracle Bones: A Journey Between China's Past and Present

Publisher: HarperCollins
Authors: Peter Hessler

ISBN: 0060826584
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: very good story
Hessler is doing it again and tells very good stories about Chinese lives set in a historical framework. This book is much more ambitious than his other book River Town, though I like the first book more. Very interesting read, but it is not really that strong on the Chinese history and society in general. Better read another book: China's global reach: markets, multinationals, and globalization, which offers vast ideas on the huge changes in the Chinese political, economic and business world.
Summary: NEW YORK PERSON
Had you ever heard of a magazine called The New York Person? I expect not. However if you take the title `New Yorker' for which Peter Hessler is the Beijing correspondent, translate it into Chinese and give it to the appropriate officials of the Chinese Communist party, the title will come back as `New York Person', and argument with the functionaries will be futile.

This is the second volume of Peter Hessler's memoirs of his life in China. In River Town he had set down his experiences as a teacher of English for the Peace Corps in a small town on the Yangtse. In Oracle Bones he is a professional journalist, still at that time single and unattached, exploring China, its peoples and their culture. As I read the book, it is autobiography even more than it is sociology or history. The author gets about a lot of China, as can be easily checked from the beautiful map at the front of the book, but his explorations have more of a random feel to me than the sense of any systematic search. Wherever he goes, he goes there with an open mind, and the acquaintances he makes are only big names insofar as some of them are highly specialised scholars. In fact the oracle bones of the book's title are not even a major element in the narrative. They are of interest in their own right and they serve as a literary linking device, but this book is mainly about people. Peter Hessler has been long enough in China to get to know a number of its ordinary citizens well. A few of his former students kept in touch with him, but in particular a good deal of the story is hung around an Uighur going under the pseudonym of Polat, kept anonymous for his own protection. Unless I am mistaken, in the `west' we don't read a lot about the real lives of ordinary ethnic Chinese let alone about Uighurs, and it is the special insight that this book gives into the thoughts, attitudes and living conditions of the hidden population that gives Oracle Bones much of its characteristic flavour.

On the other hand far and away the main linking thread in the book is the author himself and the journey of discovery he is making. The style of writing is like the man in real life, a very distinctive mixture of candour and reserve. In real life one always has the sense that Peter is noticing a great deal and missing very little. In his books we are not reading academic texts or comprehensive studies of the communities he reports on, what we are given is a set of vignettes of life in today's China (plus what can happen to an expatriate Uighur in the USA) drawn from a true journalist's perspective of what is significant, and remarkably free from preconceived notions of what to expect. He was around at the time of the NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, at the time of the mid-air collision between an American and a Chinese military aircraft at the start of the current presidency of the United States, on 9/11/2001 itself, and during the visit of GWB to China. Typically, he stays detached in his reports. If I read him rightly, he seems to suggest that the Belgrade bombing actually was deliberate, but one can't be completely sure whether he is saying that. His deadpan humour is at its best when recounting the struggles of the administration over whether to apologise for the air accident, and maybe even better in his final comment on the remarks occasioned by Mr Bush's plonking inanities during his visit - nobody was even interested enough to talk about him. Even here I have glossed what he says to some extent - Peter Hessler's way is to stay noncommittal. As regards 9/11, what he reports is telling indeed. The government of China expressed proper outrage and said all the right things: among the populace themselves the main emotion expressed was glee.

These were some of the headline events, and this is the distinctive and unusual angle we get on them. Every bit as significant and revealing are the letters from his former students and his own encounters with some of the minority communities, all of his comments thoughtful and serious but with his own special tongue-in-cheek humour as well. As you would expect, there is a fair amount of historical material, as usual seen from his own perspective with less emphasis than commonly on battles and emperors and more on excavations and methods of writing.

Insofar as Oracle Bones is about China, it is a fascinating glimpse of the other China, the China of the common people behind the headlines. Insofar as it is autobiography, it is a fascinating account of the experiences of a thinking man and a fair-minded man with an independent turn of thought and an enviable gift for expressing it, and the book is enjoyable to read as well as being beneficial. I gather there is another book in preparation, although at the moment he's not giving details, at any rate not to me. There is plenty more to be said about China, and this is the source I would rather read it from than most of the periodicals put together, except perhaps The New York Person.
Summary: A terrific view of China from a point of view of a yanguezhi
It is a bit disconcerting for a person of Chinese descent to learn about himself and his culture from a yanguezhi (foreign devil). Yet this is exactly what happened when I read Oracle Bones.

This is an extremely fine book, full of subtle observations and exquisite narratives of matters great and small. Like Pankaj Mishra's An End to Suffering, Peter Hessler attempts many things in this moveable feast. This is a travel journal, a small peek at how Hessler was able to parlay a stint in the Peace Corp teaching English in China to a freelance gig writing for the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and The New Yorker. Mostly this is a expansive look and humanistic rumination on how the globalization of the free market has touched the lives of common people of China, as exemplified by a number of Hessler's English students. Hessler used the story of his Uighur friend Polat to give us a view of every day street life in Beijing as well as the life of an oppressed asylum seeker in the US.

This style can easily become clumsy and ponderous, but Hessler does a masterful job of keeping the narrative interesting and colorful enough to lead the reader along through the turbulence of the serial form without losing each of the intricate interweaving threads.

The key to Hessler's success with this form is his usage of the archeological history of the Oracle Bones in China as the rhythm section to his narrative. Much like a steady drum beat in a good song, the rhythm soon overtakes much of the decorative accompaniment and dominates the song. The story of the archeology serves as a solid counterpoint for Hessler's riffing on globalization, on the ever-changing business environment in China, and on the peculiar yet inscrutable reactions of the Chinese government to all these changes. As the story evolves, the story of the Oracle Bones and the scholar who deciphered them comes around to dominate the narrative. The story wends itself around all the previous threads and makes the juxtaposing lines of inquiry reasonable. The story of the scholar, his wife, his family, and his wife's family, and his various colleagues - friends or foe- is transcendental in its universality. The latter part of the book, majority of which is devoted to the story of the Oracle Bone scholar has the impact of a fine mystery novel and it gives the reader the punch in the gut that one rarely gets when reading a travelogue or a book of history, or an autobiographical portrait.

This book was thoroughly enjoyable; it was concomitantly informative and soothing to the soul. The writing was superb, rhythmic, and transformational in its structure and meaning.

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Mao: The Unknown Story

Publisher: Knopf
Authors: Jung Chang Jon Halliday

ISBN: 0679422714
List Price: $35.00
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 3
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Summary: The grain of salt
Having read _Mao: the Unknown Story_ and the previous reviews of this book on Amazon, a few points leap out.

*This is a sensational and hostile tome, unyielding in its basic idea that Mao was a heartless sociopathic opportunitist. Although it has some of the trappings of a biography, it's little more than a laundry list of China's unfortunate sufferings (both individual and collectively) under this maniac's grip. For this reason, it's not a cogent biography or history book as other reviews have amply pointed out. In sum, context is lacking. For this reason, it's not a very good read.

*What emmerges is the life narrative of a reptilian-brained, lustful, wicked hypocrite who looked after only his own benefit and steadily developed a method of duping and double-cossing everyone around him. Mao is portrayed as first latching on to ideological revolution to hoist himself from his farming background, engaging in cynically-designed military blundering in the war against the Nationalists to kill off his rivals (or erstwhile comrades) in the red army, and then graduating to wholescale massacre of millions under his domain through purges and starvation (while he constructed bomb-shelter palaces to his liking, ate well, enjoyed books and operas and romped with a bevvy of girlfriends).

*Although the book isn't simply a useless collection of trash and lies as some reviewers have stated, a careful look at the copious source notes indicates the authors have allowed lies and agendas to creep into their work. I think what this "Mao" gives us is the grain of salt to add to any deep study of Mao's life. As other reviewers have suggested, this book shouldn't be read as the first and last word on Mao but rather a caustic suppliment to existing biographic work.

As the interview with the authors on this website points out, this book is intended to provoke discussion among historians (almost a challenge to historians to disprove the heinous litany).

*This book is valuable in spite of it's flaws. It opens with the following sentence: "Mao ... was responsible for well over 70 million deaths in peacetime." It then concludes, in the terse epilogue, with these sentences: "Today, Mao's portrait and his corpse still dominate Tiananmen Square ... The current communist regime declares itself to be Mao's heir and fiercely perpetuates the myth of Mao." What exists between these two statements is a generation of murder, darkness and insanity that the authors undoubtedly feel China (and the rest of the word) still needs to come to terms with as it steadily emmerges as the powerhouse of the 21st century. The fact that the authors were able to unearth so much previously unknown information indicates that this process is already well underway and this book represents a kind of long-overdue denunciation of the man who rose to the top by denunciating or killing anyone who stood in his way.



Summary: A shameless Chinese
As a Chinese, I am really feel shamed to have people like Chang from China. Just like so many fake medicine, pirate version DVD, CD, and the notorious "Dragon Heart" of the faked CPU project which even got national award in China, I don't know why there are so many cheaters like Chang in or from China.
Mao made great crime to Chinese, but this should not be used as an excuse to lie. This books is full of lie, just like many similar book written by oversea Chinese, the purporse of this kind of book is simply make sensation, and make great money. Those people who bought their books is joked as "Yuan Da Tou" in Chinese which means fools who like to spend money by cheated.
To lie in court is crime, I don't know why writing book by lying is not crime. If every writer are free to lie, I don't know who in the end will buy books.
Buying this book is like to support lying in book.
Summary: Unscholarly, retreads same old ground
I had to put this book down after a couple hundred pages. I am not sympathetic to the left in any way, but this book is very weak. There are no footnotes. As another reviewer said, the authors lay into Mao on page one and don't stop. Could your point of view be a little more transparent please?

Essentially, they argue that Mao is an opportunistic, incompetent, sadist. He wanted to have power in order to be cruel, but it he came to power despite himself and his bumbling actions.

So what is their agenda? What does it prove if Mao was not a true believer, contrary to all the evidence? Would the famines have been better if Mao "really" believed what he said?

Don't buy this confused, amateurish pop-history book.
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