Books for/about - history of China


 

 
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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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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Wild Swans : Three Daughters of China

Publisher: Touchstone
Authors: Jung Chang

ISBN: 0743246985
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: very moving
Great personal story of 3 generations of women living in the 20th century China. Readers can get very involved in the lives of these people. Through it, one can learn the great struggles of the Chinese people in the recent past. Great read, but its information and analysis on Chinese history and politics are not very deep. This book should go with another book: China's global reach: markets, multinationals, and globalization, which offers huge insights on the vast changes of the Chinese politics and business in light of history.
Summary: Open up
This is really a great read for someone interested in getting an overview of the last 90 years of mainland Chinese history. It was suprisingly easy to digest quickly - a real page turner. Particular interesting was the focus on classism and women's rights in China.
Summary: A Vew of 20th Century China
Jung Change does an excellent job of helping her readers to understand the history of twentieth century China by telling the life stories of herself, her mother and grandmother. Fascinating.
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Showdown: Why China Wants War with the United States

Publisher: Regnery Publishing, Inc.
Authors: Jed Babbin Edward Timperlake

ISBN: 1596980052
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Summary: What are the possible scenarios for World War III involving China?
What are the possible scenarios for World War III involving China? Extrapolation blends with political savvy and insights to create a survey of China's growing military buildup - more aggressive than that of Nazi Germany before the war - and its potential for challenging its Asian neighbors and U.S. interests alike. Babbin is a former Air Force JAG and Timperlake a former Marine fighter pilot: their expertise lends credibility to scenarios which are backed by the latest intelligence reports on alliances, military strengths, and world interactions.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Summary: Wrong way to compete
The Chinese economy is growing. Our economy is sliding. We have a crumbling primary school education system that performs poorly. Our prison population is exploding. The institution of marriage is falling apart thanks to insane divorce laws. And our currency stands at the brink of a meltdown.

The only way we can compete on the international scene is to get our own house in order and create jobs. Not bomb everyone that acts against 'our interests'. Should we start bombing Venezuela if they decide to sell oil to China instead of the US? Is Taiwan really worth starting a global thermo nuclear war? China taking over Taiwan will be much like China taking over Hong Kong. China's incentive will be to keep their economy moving. This book is xenophobia to the extreme.
Summary: Way off the mark
If you're seriously interested in why China wants war with the United States don't waste your money on this book. The authors don't come close to answering the question. The story line is a combination of Tom Clancy, Indiana Jones and Dr. Strange Love.A good portion of the book is devoted to military cowboys intent on blowing up anyone and everyone with weapons that only exist in the minds of Pentagon planners.

The authors take several cheap shots at previous political leaders and future candidates. Don't waste your time on this book
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1421: The Year China Discovered America

Publisher: Harper Perennial
Authors: Gavin Menzies

ISBN: 006054094X
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: Historic Dots Discovered and Connected
This remarkable book owes its publication to the rare and happy confluence of naval experience, curiosity, persistence,ample time for never-ending research and adequate funding. I found Menzies work to be well reasoned and a valuable contribution to setting the historic record straight. Building on scattered, previously known, facts as well as new evidence, Menzies did his research intelligently and connected the dots deftly. At the same time he allows for divergent views and the need for additional research to further substantiate his hypothesis.
Summary: Tip Of An Iceberg?
As a work of history, "1421" simply does not suffice. Gavin Menzies creates an intriguing tale, but his methods leave the reader waiting for additional evidence as well as the opposing viewpoint before making up their mind. The book appears to be written from the perspective of someone who has created a theory and is trying to prove it, instead of being written from the perspective of an impartial historian trying to find out what the true story is. To be fair, Mr. Menzies does state in his Acknowledgements that "this is a book for the general reader, not the academic", and he does offer to make his notes available as well as provide an internet site with more information.

Mr. Menzies through the course of telling his story bombards the reader with a lot of circumstantial evidence in such a way as to make his conclusions look like the only possible explanation. However, there are times when he makes statements which are incorrect which leave the reader wondering about the other evidence he presents. For example, he repeatedly states that the Chinese discovered America before the Europeans, and had colonies in America before the Europeans as well. However, even if he is completely correct about the stories of the Chinese fleets, the events would still be hundreds of years after the Vikings first came to North America and had a colony there. Some speculate that the Irish may have been in North America even earlier than the Vikings.

Some of Mr. Menzies evidence doesn't seem to add up either. For example when talking about the Piri Reis map, he mentions that "the ice depicted on the Piri Reis map corresponds with the normal maximum limits of drift and pack ice in midsummer", referring to the Antarctic. Later, in an effort to explain differences in another map, he states "Sea levels in 1421 were lower than they are today. Global warming has caused the south polar ice to melt, causing sea levels to rise slowly but inexorably." If the second statement were true, then we would not expect the region around Antarctica to be depicted as having the normal maximum limits of drift, but instead to have considerably more ice. To make matters worse, he supports the idea of the Chinese circumnavigating Greenland with the statement: "Greenland was far warmer than it is today. In 1421 it would have been a country of green pastures where cattle grazed in the open..." If that is true, then runoff from Greenland and North America (and probably from Scandinavia and Russia as well) would serve to raise water levels and counteract some of the effects of more ice in the Antarctic region (if indeed there were more). Thus, it is difficult to imagine a world climate that would completely support his theory of Chinese exploration.

Another thing which is puzzling is why the Chinese didn't visit Europe in their attempt to map the entire world and to create trade. Mr. Menzies never offers much of an explanation as to why they covered the entire world outside of the one continent whose civilizations would have recorded their visit. Of course this isn't proof that things didn't happen as Mr. Menzies claims, but it is a mystery left to be solved if the rest of the story is true.

This book is very entertaining, and it is a good story. However, it can not be taken as the final word on this subject, nor can it even serve as a solid historical document. If this story is true, then this is merely the tip of the iceberg. If it is not true, then this is just a collection of evidence used in a misleading way to support a false theory. Additional historical documents and scientific testing of the evidence may eventually determine the veracity of this theory. Because of the contradictions and mistakes, and the resulting weakness of the evidence, I can only give this book two stars. As far as the writing goes it is very readable and would fall between three and four stars if that were the only criteria.

Summary: Science Starts with Theories ...
... and completes with proves.
What Menzies' wonderful book provided with us is a great theory, and that is enough to deserve compliments. It's up to those similarly brave hearts and curious minds to prove it.
Einstein's Theory of Relativity remained a mere theory for almost a decade before the proof was there. Einstein was also famous for proposing incorrect theories (e.g. against the then-emerging Quantum Theory). However, no one would nor should discredit Einstein for his unsubstantiated theories.
As a physical scientist myself, I found those attacks on Menzies' theory dispicable, simply because the attackers were able to find the missing links here and there in the book.
For all us humans, there are more unknowns than the knowns. What Menzies' book reveal is exactly that: there remains to be more unknowns than the knowns. However, is there anyone here able to provide a more credible theory that could explain for the pre-Columbian maps, the relics of advanced alien cultures, etc. etc..
I don't think anyone who read the first 1/3 of the book should have much question. Much of that is well known history. Those who question the entire book because their own ignorance of that history simply do not deserve a say on this panel.
After that, Menzies is fairly convincing and persuasive in taking us down the coast of Monzambique, around the Cape, and up the Atlantic coast of Africa.
As everyone else, I started to "lose" it a little bit after Cape Verde, and down the cost of Argentina. However, this is not Menzies' fault, he's not meant to be there to provide us with all the answeres, he's there to provide us with the awareness of all the unanswered questions. This is where I think the true value of the book is, it's truly thought-provoking to read the remaining chapters, and struggle to connect the dots. Those discernible eyes will find a real gold mine where others found a heap of rubbish.
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Daughter of the Yellow River

Publisher: Image Global Impact
Authors: Diana Lu

ISBN: 1933726016
List Price: $24.95
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 5
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Summary: Inspiring - A great book
Inspiring is a bit of an understatement. This is the life story of Diana Lu and one of the best self-help books you will ever read.

It is a real page turner. You become totally involved and anxious to see how everything works out for Diana.

Jing-Jing (Diana) grew up in China during the Cultural Revolution. Her family was transferred to a remote coal mining town on the edge of the Gobi Desert. By American standards, they experienced extreme poverty - they had to keep their chickens in the living room. When they were finally transferred back to a large city, their first apartment was 160 square feet - for a family of five. By our standards, conditions were nothing short of horrible.

But this remarkable young woman is a shining example that no matter where you come from, if you are passionate and determined, you can achieve your goals. She became an extremely successful business woman, eventually moving to San Francisco.

By American standards, she has achieve great financial success. But more importantly, she has achieved inner peace.

Diana's path to the top was far from straight. A degree as a medical doctor that she choose not to utilize, a failed marriage to an American, a Chinese company that breeched their agreement with her ... there were more disappointments than victorys. But through her life, she stayed the course. No matter what obstacle, she perserved.

At the end of each chapter is Diana's Stepping Stones on the Journey to Success. A wonderful recap of the lessons she learned from each bitter experience. These lessons are great. But as I said this is a great self-help book because Diana goes into such great details about all the obstacles in her life. These stepping stones are real treasures.

You should take away two very important lessons. No matter your goal in life, you can achieve it if you are passionate about your goal and are determined, no matter what the obstacles, to achieve them.
Summary: Ling Ling - Diana - you are remarkable!
I dare you to put down this book before finishing it!
You can throw away your self-help books and just read the last chapter of Diana's book over and over.
Each chapter has brief "lessons" that are worth saving, too.

I'm an Irish Christian woman and was skeptical because I don't know much about China; but this lady has a beautiful soul and so much to offer!

I thank Warran Whitlock for sharing this book, and the valuable Joint Venture products that were included with the modest price.

Honesty, intelligence, cooperation, barter, friendship, joint ventures... Diana teaches us to think positive and big.
My deepest gratitude for a book well-written!
Ling Ling, you are Beautiful!!!!!
Love
Mary


Summary: The Chinese Martha Stewart
Something about this book caught my eye at the local bookstore. What should have been a 2 minute browse through became an hour of intense reading. What makes the book interesting is the continued ongoing analysis and insights that Diane Lu provides on modeling her life to take advantage of both the Western influences in China and the traditional Chinese method of interacting with societal changes. Her writing and thoughts flow well and takes the reader into areas of Asian insight, customs and related social norms that most Americans ignore. Her domination of the English language is remarkable given the fact that she learned the language before ever traveling outside of China. In addition she readily adapted to the Western influences in ways of conduct for both business and in her personal life. It's a remarkable story of determination that encourages readers to utilize their best efforts when striving for a better quality of life.
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River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze (P.S.)

Publisher: Harper Perennial
Authors: Peter Hessler

ISBN: 0060855029
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 5
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Summary: Great Book!
Perceptive, well written, funny. After living in China for over two years, I found Peter's book to be very insightful to the "Chinese Characteristics" of the Chinese people. Great story!
Summary: Pleasure to read--insightful, well-written
For anyone who wants to gain an understanding of the Chinese people, this is a good place to start. With unusual candor and insight (especially for someone in his twenties), Mr. Hessler uses anecdotes to relay his observations of Chinese life and perspective. An enjoyable read, both because it is well-written and because it is very interesting (and even humorous).
Summary: Moody writing style perfectly captures author's viewpoint
Romantic and poetic, Hessler sets the mood, and the book reveals itself slowly, so by the end the reader yearns for something that they can't quite grasp.

Set up with interlacing chapters about Hessler's day-to-day life and little vignettes about observations of Chinese life the book lays out an eyes-wide-open style of prose. For the most part this works except sometimes it seems like the author is putting together stories that he used to practice writing.

Although Hessler tries to be the humble Peace Corps volunteer his book smacks of elitism. It got a little pretentious when he said his parents sent him a travel article he wrote for The New York Times... And obviously his connections there with raving reviews let his book get much more exposure than should have been warranted.

The most incredulous thing actually was his adamant stance of not dating for the two years he spent there... that seems the most unbelievable since he is so poetic one would think that women would fawn over his love letters!
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