Showing posts with label android. Show all posts
Showing posts with label android. Show all posts

Moving the mountain: My life in China from the cultural revolution to Tiananmen Square Review

Moving the mountain: My life in China from the cultural revolution to Tiananmen Square
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Moving the mountain: My life in China from the cultural revolution to Tiananmen Square ReviewAnyone interested in China must read this moving masterpiece. It begins with early life of Lu Li , growing up under the horrors of the Red Tyranny in China, and moves on to describing the part played by a small group of brave young Chinese people, who took on the might of the cruel Communist monolith. It also documents in detail the horrific events of the Tianmen Square massacre.
Carve the names of these young people in gold.Moving the mountain: My life in China from the cultural revolution to Tiananmen Square Overview

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Science in Traditional China : a comparative perspective Review

Science in Traditional China : a comparative perspective
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Science in Traditional China : a comparative perspective ReviewThis short book, with its many charming and fascinating illustrations from ancient China, will interest many. Needham gives the history of gunpowder and firearms and comparative macrobiotics.
What really interested me, however, is the concluding essay, in which Needham speculates why science never developed in China. And it is a mystery, one that many scholars have pondered. China's civilization had thousands of years of stable government. And it has a tradition that venerated scholars. China also had a history of many interesting inventions and engineers. Certainly, all the factors seemed lined up to aid in the blossoming of scince.
Yet science, not just mere technology, real science, with its organized effort to explain and understand nature, with its interest in abstract subjects and its testing of theories, only developed in the west. Why?
Needham suggests it was the way the Chinese viewed time. Across the entire of the western ancient world, as well as India and China, time was viewed as a great wheel, with one golden age with great technologies succeeded by a fallen era, when idea would be lost. Then the golden age would reappear, with all the same technologies.
What the west had was Christianity, which posited a time which was not a wheel, but which progressed. Christ, after all, came in historical time.
Alfred North Whitehead placed the reason the west developed science on Christian theology. This is what he stated: "There seems but one source...It must come from the medieval insistence on the rationality of God...Every detail was supervised and ordered; the search in to nature could only result in the vindication of the faith in rationality".
From the very start, as shown in such Christian theologians as Tertullian and Augustine, Christians argued that there was a truth. Truth was God. And the truth could be discovered by rationality.Science in Traditional China : a comparative perspective Overview

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Looking for Jake and Other Stories Review

Looking for Jake and Other Stories
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Looking for Jake and Other Stories ReviewChina Mieville at last releases more pieces of his talent in this collection of fourteen stories. Some have been previously released, and if you are a die-hard fan like myself you may already have them.
'Reports of Certain Events In London' was in McSweeney's Enchanted Chamber of Astonishing Stories, 'Entry From A Medical Encyclopedia' was published as 'Buscard's Murrain' in The Thackery T. Lambshead Pocket Guide To Eccentric And Discredited Diseases, and 'The Tain' is from Cities.
'Looking For Jake' did leave me slightly disappointed in some areas, namely the political undertones of 'Tis The Season' (originally published in The Socialist Review) and 'An End To Hunger', neither of which contained any real fantasy or horror, and the oddly vapid 'On The Way To The Front', an amateurish graphic piece.
There are, however, other stories in this collection that make the price worthwhile just for them.
'Familiar' is a gruesomely enchanting story of one male witch's creation run amok, 'Different Skies' takes a simple window replacement and shows us the kind of horror that can be reflected in oddness, and 'Foundation' will take you beneath the structures of everyday life and into a man's horrific ability to see the dead below them.
'Jack' is a nice addition to Mieville's 'Perdido Street Station', giving us a bit of background on his character Jack Half-A-Prayer, and 'The Tain' is a twisted tale of mirrors and what lies beyond.
If you are a rabid Mieville fan, you simply must have this book. If you are introducing yourself to Mieville, I actually recommend starting with 'Perdido Street Station' to allow yourself to fully savor this talented writer's rich offerings. Reading Mieville is like eating chocolate cheesecake, rich and satisfying and fulfilling. Enjoy!
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Daughter of China: A True Story of Love and Betrayal Review

Daughter of China: A True Story of Love and Betrayal
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Daughter of China: A True Story of Love and Betrayal ReviewI had mixed feelings about this book ... it is well written and I remained interested throughout, but I became increasingly disenchanted with the author, Xu Meihong. There seemed something rather cold and calculating about her. Larry Engelmann on the other hand, struck me as being generous and loving, but naive. Some of the story seemed improbable and while I believed most of it, I know enough about China to have some scepticism. I felt sorry for the men in Meihong's life: her first and second husbands, as I felt they were far more heroic and giving than she was. While doing her best to make a case for leaving her first husband on the grounds that he would be better off without her, and that she was doing him and his career a favour by divorcing him, I found her arguments unconvincing. Her motivation throughout the book seemed mostly self seeking and her love for Lin Cheng and Larry Engelmann rather lacking in depth and committment. I was not altogether surprised to find at the end of the book that she had left Larry.
I was also disappointed at her scant reference to the Tienanmen Square massacre. I'm sure there was much more that she could have said, especially as an eye witness.
Xu Mehihong is obviously an ambitious person and her story portrays this aspect of her personality throughout. She achieved her ambition to get to the West too, albeit through dishonest means. But I cannot say that my final impression of her was one that I particularly liked. All in all, this book left a slightly sour taste in my mouth!Daughter of China: A True Story of Love and Betrayal Overview

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Knowing and Teaching Elementary Mathematics: Teachers' Understanding of Fundamental Mathematics in China and the United States (Studies in Mathematical Thinking and Learning Series) Review

Knowing and Teaching Elementary Mathematics: Teachers' Understanding of Fundamental Mathematics in China and the United States (Studies in Mathematical Thinking and Learning Series)
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Knowing and Teaching Elementary Mathematics: Teachers' Understanding of Fundamental Mathematics in China and the United States (Studies in Mathematical Thinking and Learning Series) ReviewI am working on certification in secondary mathematics. This one book has given me more insight into what is wrong with mathematics education in the USA and what needs to be done than anything else I have read or discussed in class.
The author's key point is that even the best elementary school math teachers in this country have only a shallow, cookbook knowledge of arithmetic and are not trained to think mathematicaly.
One consequence is that the emphasis in mathematics teacher training on new instructional practices: use of manipulatives, "authentic assessment" collaborative learning, etc. is at best misplaced.
There is much interesting information on Chinese educational practices. Math at all levels is taught by specialists who have only the equivalent of a Chinese high school education. Classes are very large but teachers have about an hour of time for preparation, grading homework, and student conferences for every hour of instruction. Chinese math teachers spend many, many hours working with the curriculum as learners both individually and in groups.
The book is a rich source of ideas that might be adapted to the American environment to improve math instruction.Knowing and Teaching Elementary Mathematics: Teachers' Understanding of Fundamental Mathematics in China and the United States (Studies in Mathematical Thinking and Learning Series) Overview

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A New History of Christianity in China (Blackwell Guides to Global Christianity) Review

A New History of Christianity in China (Blackwell Guides to Global Christianity)
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A New History of Christianity in China (Blackwell Guides to Global Christianity) ReviewDaniel Bays' update has long been awaited, especially as he now includes developments beyond the paradigmatic Deng era! He provides a carefully researched and balanced accounting of the development of Christianity in China. I was particularly appreciative of his inclusion of new considerations among scholars concerning long-held assumptions attributing relics to certain religions while not jumping into endorsing conclusions that still lack conclusive evidence. It would have been better if he had allowed himself some latitude to comment on the theological implications of historical developments, and new discoveries but I accept that this would perhaps have strayed from the focus of this work.A New History of Christianity in China (Blackwell Guides to Global Christianity) Overview

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The United States and China, 4th Edition Review

The United States and China, 4th Edition
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The United States and China, 4th Edition ReviewIn an era where America is the last remaining superpower, it is sometimes easy to feel that there are no real threats left in the world to American security (apart from the occasional terrorist, that is); it is easy to slip into a complacency a la the British Empire in thinking itself impregnable due to its relative insularity from the rest of the world (truly, for a variety of reasons, Canada and Mexico pose no real threats to America) and the power it is able to wield abroad. Of course, there are many countries, geographic areas, economic coalitions, and military alliances in the world, both real and potential, that could pose a major threat to the America. Thus, it is important that in this period of relative hegemonic success, Americans do not become insular in thinking.
This is a rather long preamble to introduce a book of importance, 'The United States and China', by John King Fairbank. When I first studied political science as an undergraduate, I had completed the requirements for my primary major without having once heard a lecture or participated in a discussion of any substance on the topic of China. Perhaps this is because the prominence of the Soviet Union in the superpower relations, and most political scientists when discussing international relations preferred to focus on economic powers (Japan, Western Europe, emerging markets and resource-rich areas), or on comparative democracies, both of which do not include China. China has been, and continues to be, a mystery in most Western eyes, including those of scholars and political strategists.
It has only been with the breakup of the Soviet Union that the prominence of China has been increased. No longer is it considered a backwater; no longer is it ignored save in relation to American interests in Taiwan. Even at the height of the conflicts in Vietnam and Korea, the West had very limited knowledge of China. As mysteriously enigmatic as the Soviet Union might have been, it was still essentially Western in orientation and ambition; the Western powers could be reasonable sure that discussions with and strategies against the Soviet Union would proceed on the same framework of thought. Despite China now being a Marxist-inspired regime, it is still essentially Eastern, with an historical and philosophical underpinning vastly different from the West. China is one of few civilisations to survive that arose as an independent urban culture from the mists of prehistory; it is the only one that has retained a powerful position.
Due to it's relative isolation from the rest of the world, and its now millennium-old concentration on the preservation of cultural integrity against outside forces (which produces a very strange dynamic with the introduction of Marxist and Western radical political ideas), China has remained focussed upon internal situations.
'The strength of China's age-old family system has made it a target of the modern revolution. New loyalties to nation and to party have countered the claims of familism, but not always successfully.'
Fifty years of Marxism still has not managed to replace the old ways. Perhaps one reason why pro-democracy ideas do not have more urgency in China is that this, too, is a foreign concept.
Bounded by the Himalayas, the vast Mongolian steppes and plateaus, the Siberian hinterlands, and the Pacific Ocean, China remains a large area of relative isolation. China has vast resources, but only recently had the capacity to exploit them in any systematic and useful way. The land is used almost entirely for grain-food cultivation, made even more necessary by the continuing population explosion. Even with this high percentage of grain agriculture focus (90% versus 40% for America), China cannot support itself. Livestock is a rarity (only 2% of farmland is used for this, as opposed to nearly 50% of American farmland for this purpose).
China had its own renaissance, several hundred years before the Italian Renaissance that sparked the development in the West that led to our present age. However (and perhaps it was due to the lack of necessity that China failed to continue this development whereas Western nations, always at threat from each other, were required to for survival) China ceased to make technological and economic advances on a significant scale, and retreated into a thousand year decline. By the time the European powers shipping arrived in Chinese ports in the 1800s, Chinese power was no match for even small numbers of these new powers.
John King Fairbank first wrote the book 'The United States and China' in 1948, recognising the lack of good information, historically and politically, about China. It has been revised a number of times, taking into account more scholarship and learning, as well as the developments in relationship with China (the Korean conflict, the Vietnamese conflict, the 'reopening' of China, continuing tensions with regard to Taiwan). Fairbank in his introduction states that he produced this work in the hopes of a greater peace between East and West; sadly, that has not been the case. With the re-emergence of China into international affairs, trade, and military consideration, there is a question which remains about future peace with China. Fairbank, who was a professor of history at Harvard, has always been regarded an expert source in Chinese history, analysis of Chinese society, and Sino-Chinese relations. This book contains elements of all of these.
For a greater understanding of China, for the interested CNN-watcher to the student of politics and international relations, this book is a valuable resource.The United States and China, 4th Edition Overview

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Red China Blues: My Long March from Mao to Now Review

Red China Blues: My Long March from Mao to Now
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Red China Blues: My Long March from Mao to Now ReviewI should start with why I like and recommend this book. Jane Wong tells a fascinating story, and I found this book to be extremely hard to put down. Her descriptions of life in China during the latter part of the cultural revolution, the gradual reopening of the country following Mao's death, and the crackdown at Tiananmen are first rate, emotionally powerful, and give you a sense of what it would have felt like to "be there" during those momentous events in recent Chinese history. I almost didn't read this book because I have read so many other books on China over the past years (in addition to a brief visit and many conversations with Chinese friends) that I didn't think this one would have much to offer. I couldn't have been more wrong. I would rate this book in the top two, along with Steven Mosher's "Broken Earth; The Rural Chinese".
My disappointment with the book is due to the remarkable lack of depth in Jane's own spiritual journey. I was surprised to learn that she never really breaks with Mao. In the final scene of the book she is at a celebration of the 100th anniversary of Mao's birth, wearing a Mao button and nostalgically singing the Internationale (she explainst that the communist anthem is still one of her favorite songs). While vacuously deceptive, the book's subtitle "My Long March from Mao to Now" is technically accurate; time did pass, Mao died, and she, like China, has changed. However, "My Long March from Mao to... a Little Less Mao" would be more descriptive.
Perhaps because she hasn't rejected Mao, she approaches the many forms of oppression in today's China not as vestiges of the Maoist system, but as creations of the new one. It is as if the opening of the curtains had created the stage, instead of revealing it. In response to the horror of the Tiananmen crackdown, she remarks that "Mao never had to send tanks into Beijing". It apparently doesn't occur to her that Mao would have imprisoned and/or executed these people long before tanks were needed, even though she personally witnessed Mao's crushing of the much more subdued "Democracy Wall" movement years earlier. Likewise, while recounting China's continuing widespread use of the death penalty and slave labor camps for political criminals, she doesn't seem to make the connection that this was the system she had declared morally superior and dedicated herself to. If she felt a tinge of personal responsibility while recounting these horrors, she certainly kept it to herself.
She tells us early in the book that she originally hoped to go to China with the goal of becoming the Chinese equivalent to "Hanoi Jane", serving as Mao's mouthpiece to the west. She further explains that she was fully prepared to lie in her effort to promote the cause, and that she felt that in this case lying wouldn't be wrong because it would be in defense of a "perfect" system. This is a fascinating admission, because it demonstrates that even then she knew she was being lied to. Why expect to have to lie when promoting "Utopia" to those who haven't seen it, especially before you've seen it yourself?
For me the most disturbing thing is that she seems to think that her admission that she shouldn't have turned the people in who begged her for help during the cultural revolution constitutes the completion of, and not the first step towards, a personal moral (or if you prefer Karmic) accounting. She stops at "this was wrong", without asking the hard questions of why she did this in the first place. Her self assurances that "we all did this during the cultural revolution", and "I was naive" fall far short of the mark. True, most (if not all) ordinary Chinese did find themselves forced to inform on others as a means of survival during the Cultural Revolution. However, unlike them she had the opportunity to leave whenever she wanted (she had to plead to stay). She informed out of ideology, not self-preservation. She believed that those who committed "thought crimes" deserved whatever punishment Maoist China reserved for them. This is where the argument "I was naive" would come to play (at least partially), except in her case it is equally false. Unlike ordinary Chinese, she knew what the free world she was rejecting was like, and to the extent that she was lied to, it was a deliberate choice on her part to accept the lies. Lastly, she doesn't make much of an effort to find out what happened to the "thought criminals" she informed on. Were they sent to the gulag? executed? or just exiled to the countryside for hard labor, extreme deprivation, and "thought reform"? When were they released? Did they survive? We are never told.
To be fair to the author, neither group she considers herself a part of would prod her to undertake a more thorough moral and philosophical accounting of her life's choices. Her nostalgia for Mao doesn't place her out of line with current mainstream or even dissident Chinese thought. As she recounts, the Tiananmen democracy activists didn't hesitate to turn over those in their ranks who vandalized the giant picture of Mao on the square. Likewise, there is no movement within the 60s radical community to reconsider it's profound moral support of communist regimes. Those who reverently carried (and quoted from) a copy of Mao's "Little Red Book" and publicly chanted "Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Mihn!" 30 years ago, limit themselves today to gushing about how much less repressive these systems are now than when they wholeheartedly supported them. The most troubling thought is if someone with Jane's profound personal experiences isn't inspired to consider these issues while writing a book about her own life's journey, who will?Red China Blues: My Long March from Mao to Now Overview

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Genius of China Review

Genius of China
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Genius of China ReviewThere are both good and bad aspects of this book. First, it is an overall look at China's ancient technology. Not a bad idea. However, it is terse, and not very in-depth. I would recommend reading Sterling Seagrave's Lords of the Rim, which has added information regarding Needham's research - like the wonderful look at China's naval expertise and their huge ships that plied the seas (with room for horses and gardens), which Genius of China does not mention. Genius, however, is a great resource for folks who know nothing about China's ancient scientific discoveries, and is, therefore, an incentive to study further.
I disagree with one reviewer. I do not find Temple distainful of Western thought and scientific expertise. One has to remember the difficulties Europe was going through prior to and during the Renaissance and Reformation in regard to fighting for the freedom to study science openly - without the fear of inquisition. England, having divorced itself from Rome, was freer to read, experiment with, and discover the truths behind the Chinese knowledge - much of which was coming out of the Orient through the returning missionaries. Even though the Protestants abhorred the Jesuits, they were very interested in learning and using what the Jesuits had discovered while in China. Understanding a little more about Western history during this period illustrates why the West was "behind" the Chinese in their scientific endeavors. In addition, many of these European scientists made their own experiments derived from that knowledge and did not give credit to the Chinese.
In addition, Needham and Temple have cleared up some anomolies that appear in David Tame's The Secret Power of Music, by giving us a better understanding of how the tuned chung bells were used to regulate China's measurements. The pitched pipes in a hermetically sealed room turn out to be a "superstitius absurity or a long-standing case of fraud". The authors do not make any reference to Tame's "Yellow note".
For anyone who can't afford hundreds of dollars to buy all of Needham's volumes on this subject, I think Genius is a good place to start.Genius of China Overview

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Decorating with China and Glass Review

Decorating with China and Glass
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Decorating with China and Glass ReviewI really enjoyed reading this book. It's quite informative and there are a lot of marvelous photos of various types of china and glass in this book. They show diverse styles and patterns throughout the centuries and cultures. There is also a good section on how and where to store your china and glass. Such amazing things they can do with glass. I was impressed. I really liked the section on the art of the table. Can't get enough of the elegant table settings! Such beautiful kitchens in this book as well. It's a great book. I only wished it were longer.Decorating with China and Glass Overview

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"Socialism Is Great": A Worker's Memoir of the New China Review

Socialism Is Great: A Worker's Memoir of the New China
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"Socialism Is Great": A Worker's Memoir of the New China ReviewI have met Lijia Zhang by a chance encounter as we shared the same row seat on a recent trans Pacific flight. At the onset of our casual conversation, I was impressed by her command of the English language, quite uncharacteristic of a native Chinese. I naively asked, "where did you learn to speak such good English?" She modestly replied that she is a writer, just having returned from a US book tour promoting her newly released "Socialism is Great!" and proudly handed me a fresh copy. Then, for the next 12 hours I was practically glued to the book, discovering the answer to my original question, and learning much more...

"Socialism is Great!" is an autobiography spanning a 10 year period of Ms Zhang's young adult life centering in China's ancient capital of Nanjing. On a surface level, it is a story about Lijia, a free spirited young woman coming of age. The book's plot skillfully meanders around both her home life, dominated by a strong mother, and her work place, a munitions factory, whose 'danwei' system keeps her shackled to a monotonous job while denying her the higher education which she desperately seeks. Lijia's heart is fragile, first broken by a handsome young intellectual called Red Rock, and then hurt once more by an older married man. In disillusionment, she spirals down to a series of loveless affairs and one night stands. Unlike her heart, Lijia has a tough skin, and against all obstacles she single-mindedly pursues a dream to better her education, to study and perfect her English (she even hides to study in the factory's garbage dump - the only place to provide her privacy), so she can free herself of her factory confinement and become a journalist.

On another, and more significant level, the book's plot unravels against a backdrop that vividly portrays the dawn days of modern China, a post Mao Zedong's era of the 1980's, in a period when the tornado of the Cultural Revolution has dissipated, yet its dust has not quite settled. This is a time of great change, as the Communist system shifts toward market economy. Individuals become entrepreneurial, while government controlled factories find creative ways of competing in a free market. (In an ironical example, Lijia's munitions factory produces a huge bronze statue of Buddha). Many shed their old garbs to mimic Western styles and anything American (as does Lijia to her old cadres' displeasure). Others are out rightly challenging the limits of the new government.

The book kept me captivated as I was anxious to learn at every step how the bravely tenacious young woman was going to 'make it' out of the factory. Every page is sprinkled with colorful metaphors, perhaps influenced by ancient Chinese proverbs. The author's mastery of the English prose brings to mind another non-native English writer from another century - Joseph Conrad. I find the book to be quite informative and recommend it to anyone who wants to learn more about Chinese history and its culture.

When finished reading the book, I felt as though an epilogue would be useful to explain what happened to Lijia personally after she left the factory. I also wished she provided her commentary on China's progress today, which certainly is influenced by the policies of the 80's. Or perhaps the author will produce a sequel book to deal with the subject. I certainly would want to read it."Socialism Is Great": A Worker's Memoir of the New China Overview

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The Way of the Panda: The Curious History of China's Political Animal Review

The Way of the Panda: The Curious History of China's Political Animal
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The Way of the Panda: The Curious History of China's Political Animal ReviewEveryone now accepts, or worries about, the economic power of China. For decades, though, Chinese diplomats have had a power over the world that surpasses that of dollars and yuan. When they really wanted to get something done, they brought out their pandas. Citizens and statesmen from distant nations clamored for these mammals with all the longing that children have for their favorite teddy bears. There was an international "Awwwwww!" whenever a panda came on the world stage for a transfer. Pandas are far from being mere political tokens, but that role is designated in the subtitle of _The Way of the Panda: The Curious History of China's Political Animal_ (Pegasus Books) by science journalist Henry Nicholls. This enthralling book is about politics, and history, but it is also about natural history and ecology. Pandas are not just extraordinarily cute, they are biologically extraordinary. The affectionate human response to them counts for plenty, but overall, pandas have not prospered with humans as neighbors and hunters and collectors. Chronicled here, too, however, are stories of the many humans making an effort to understand this inscrutable animal, and the story of the panda is not one without hope.
In all those fabulous Imperial vases and dishes, no artist depicted the panda until the nineteenth century. It is just astonishing that it was only in 1869 that a Westerner saw a panda. He was able to send the specimen back to Paris, starting an argument as to whether such a strange creature was really a bear or was closer to the lesser panda and raccoon (DNA has since said it is a bear). Naturally biologists wanted to learn more, and game hunters wanted the trophy. When getting dead panda specimens had been accomplished, the next goal was go get living ones. In 1937, thousands came to see "Su-Lin," in a Chicago zoo, a pattern that has recurred for any zoo that gets a new panda. For all the value pandas have had for China, it has been only recently that the Chinese have valued them enough to take steps to protect them. Mao's "Great Leap Forward" was a huge step backward. The philosophy that nature was there to be conquered was simply dead wrong; forests were leveled for crops and for industrial fuel, with little actual economic improvement and with disaster for the panda's habitat. Nicholls stresses that the panda's regions are secondary only to the tropics for species diversity. Thus it was an easy step to imagine that pandas given to zoos would serve as breeding stock for pandas to be reinserted into the wild. This strategy proved to be difficult. Pandas have proved by surviving for millions of years that they are not averse to sex; one of the researchers who got a rare glimpse of panda coitus in the wild noted a couple mating forty times. Still, pandas have proved to be one of the most difficult of animals to breed in captivity. This has been a boon for headline writers, because the public takes gossipy interest in the private lives of panda couples. When a female returned to England after failing to mate with a male in Moscow, headlines were "From Russia, Without Love" or "Return of the Virgin Panda." You can read here about how attempts to bring baby pandas into the world are improving (and you might squirm a little as you read the details of a process called electroejaculation). Whether the increasing success will mean anything to wild populations is still unanswered. Popping a panda bred and raised in a zoo into the bamboo wilds is still just a big gamble; we just don't know enough about what we are doing. Nicholls spends many pages examining the "virtual" panda as a toy or an animated film star. You can find panda brands of milk, Chinese take-out, cigarettes, and toilet paper, but the most famous of the panda brands is the logo of the World Wildlife Fund. The WWF has had a panda as its logo since the organization was founded in 1961, and of course the panda fits as a symbol of endangerment. It took, however, almost twenty years for the WWF to start studying the panda's plight.
It is startling that for all the fame of the panda, and its shaky ecological situation, and for all the affection the beast invokes in even the hard-hearted, we don't even know how many are left in the wild. The bears are just as elusive as ever, and even the most recent counts, everyone realizes, are estimates that may be way off. If we don't have a good count, how ever are we going to be able to assess what helps boost the population? It's one of Nicholls's fine lessons here. We feel familiar with the panda because of all its commercial and cutesy applications, but the animal is almost as mysterious as when that first skin was sent to Paris less than 150 years ago. Keeping up a population of wild pandas will be iffy. After Nicholls's explanations about the research into the creatures, though, it is hard to argue with his conclusion: "The continued existence of wild pandas, and the opportunity to study them, just makes the world a more interesting place in which to live."
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Riding The Iron Rooster: By Train Through China Review

Riding The Iron Rooster: By Train Through China
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Riding The Iron Rooster: By Train Through China ReviewThis is a well-written literay account of Theroux's travels through the difficult land of modern China. I first read this while living in (British) Hong Kong and making trips to and through the mainland. I have never laughed so much at the crazy predicaments Theroux gets himself into or observes (many the same as I was experiencing), and was struck not only at the quality of his writing but how rare a writer he is for covering this difficult and insecure part of the world.
What shines through in the pages of this book is that Theroux the writer is beholden to no one; he delivers accuracy of description everytime, and while this is the essence of a good travel writer, it is not a trait relished by governments out east like China's, where in fact the culture demands "saving face" over telling the blunt truth (see Bo Yang's book The Ugly Chinaman for an in-depth account of this fascinating aspect of Chinese culture). Even some westerners who live out East (and might like us to think of the Third World as some kind of paradise posting) can get upset at this kind of sober truth-telling about "their" China. For the detached reader, Theroux's book is an honest, funny, non-spin-doctored account.
If you like this book, try Theroux's Kowloon Tong, his Hong Kong novel banned in China, a very accurate depiction of that small city and the people (both westerners and easterners) who lived in it at the time of the Handover (I read it while living there). Timothy Mo's The Monkey King is another classic China novel about an eccentric Chinese family - a witty, poignant tale, and a book so on the mark that, if anything, it was even more attacked by certain frumps out East than Kowloon Tong!Riding The Iron Rooster: By Train Through China Overview

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American Presidential China: The Robert L. McNeil, Jr., Collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art Review

American Presidential China: The Robert L. McNeil, Jr., Collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art
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American Presidential China: The Robert L. McNeil, Jr., Collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art ReviewI have been looking for a book on White House China and it is just what I hoped it would be.American Presidential China: The Robert L. McNeil, Jr., Collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art Overview

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River Town; Two Years on the Yangtze Review

River Town; Two Years on the Yangtze
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River Town; Two Years on the Yangtze ReviewIn his concluding remarks of River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze, Peter Hessler points us to the nub of his experience in China:
"I had never had any idealistic illusions about my Peace Corps 'service' in China; I wasn't there to save anybody or leave an indelible mark on the town. If anything, I was glad that during my two years in Fuling I hadn't built anything, or organized anything, or made any great changes to the place. I had been a teacher, and in my spare time I had tried to learn as much as possible about the city and its people. That was the extent of my work, and I was comfortable with those roles and I recognized their limitations."
In fall 1996, Peter Hessler, at the age of 26, took a Peace Corps assignment that relocated him to a small town in the Sichuan province of China. Many natives let alone a young American who made his inaugural entrance into the country did not know and hear of Fuling. It's a former coal-mining town that is bounded by the Yangtze and the Wu. Chongqing and the Three Gorges are just hours away by boats. The book chronicles, in a rather casual but detailed way, Peter's teaching experience at the Fuling Education College and his life and anecdotes in town. Interwoven into Peter's diary are descriptions of local landmarks and customs. This book is by far the most passionate and yet accurate and objective account written any foreigners. Peter really does possess a keen sense of his surroundings. Throughout his crisp, interesting prose and attention to details, the Chinese 'laobaixing' (common people) become alive as if we are actually interacting with them.
I am in awe of how far Peter has gone in making meticulous observations of the Chinese culture and its people. A lot of what he mentions in this book is often overlooked by foreigners. To cite some examples:
1)Cultural shock: Wherever Peter goes in town, he often gathers a crowd looking dagger at him, saying 'hello', calling name and following him. To his surprises later on, he realizes the town has never had a foreign visitor for at least 50 years. It is a mixed bag of xenophobia and curiosity for foreigners. No soon than Peter arrived in town than he realized that foreigners are usually treated differently in daily necessities and accommodation. Certain inns were forbidden to accommodate foreigners due to the untidiness. Foreigners often had to pay a higher fare for the steamboats.
2)Teaching style: Learning Chinese was excruciatingly painful for Peter (and for many Americans I'm sure). The Mandarin comes with 4 intonations and the thousands of characters have complicated strokes and dots. Suffice it to say that the slightest mispronunciation or missing a stroke in writing will reap a harsh admonishment from Peter's native Chinese teacher. 'Budui' is the devil word meaning 'wrong'. As Peter has pointed out, the Chinese teaching style is significantly different from the western methods. If a student is wrong, she needed to be corrected (or rebuked) immediately without any quibbling or softening. It is the very strict standard that motivates Peter to determinedly show his teacher he is 'dui' (right). His bitter encounter with the Chinese way enables him to finally relate to his Chinese-American peers, who go to school and become accustomed to the American system of gentle correction. But the Chinese parents expect more-unless you get straight A's, you haven't achieved anything yet! Hey, I can relate to this Peter!
3)Hong Kong handover: Little did I know about how the mainland Chinese made such a big deal about the turn-of-the-century event in 1997 until I read Peter's account. His students have been drilled on the shamefulness of history, of how the Britain defeated the Chinese in Opium War, of how China was coerced to cease the fragrant city for 150 years. I knew about how the Chinese (especially the Party leaders) awaited the moment when the five-star red flag ascend to full staff in Hong Kong but shamefulness? The magnitude of the colony's return to motherland simply overwhelmed Peter (and myself): the handover lapel pin, the handover umbrella, and the handover rubber flip-flops!
4)Chinese collectivism: This is something that not only amazes but also puzzles me and Peter has nailed it to the root. The Chinese people are often nonchalant, indifferent, and apathetic to politics, crisis or crimes. Well, according to Peter, 'as long as a pickpocket [or whatever] did not affect you personally, or affect somebody in your family, it was not your business.' So this is the usual Chinese mind-my-own-business attitude. This attitude is so implanted inveterately into the Chinese due to decades of isolation (from media and geography) and political control. I think Peter really brings it home. The consequence is a strictly standardized education system, common beliefs among the people, common reactions toward political issues, and an unchallenging submission to authority.
River Town is indeed one of the best books I've ever read for years. Peter is not only an on-looking 'waiguoren' (foreigner) but he has found his identity among the Chinese. He befriended the owner of the restaurant and his family. He established daily and weekly routines which include newspaper reading at the teahouse and chatting with the teahouse 'xiaojie' (girls), hiking up to the mountaintop, visiting the vendors at a local park, and hanging out with his students after class. During the summer vacation, he took an excursion to the Great Wall in Shanxi and Urmuqi in Xinjiang. The prose is vivid, crisp, and gripping. I really appreciate how he approaches the people and culture with an honesty-to have gone so far as some of the moments of candor become unpleasant. This is a page-turner, the kind of book that you don't want to end so soon. 5.0 stars.River Town; Two Years on the Yangtze Overview

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The Hump: America's Strategy for Keeping China in World War II (Williams-Ford Texas A&M University Military History Series) Review

The Hump: America's Strategy for Keeping China in World War II (Williams-Ford Texas AandM University Military History Series)
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The Hump: America's Strategy for Keeping China in World War II (Williams-Ford Texas A&M University Military History Series) ReviewThe Hump, by John Plating, is an informative book about the airlift, in WWII, over the Himalayas to "keep China in the war."There is a myth that the pilots who flew "over the hump" were especially brave and/or skilled. Through his careful research, Plating documents this was not always the case.He also correctly argues that supplying the Chinese was as much about symbolism as it was about substance.

Much of the "Himalayan effort" concerned logistics and Plating discusses logistics at length. However, to keep the text from being a dry recitation of facts and figures, many photos, charts, and maps are included. There is also much discussion about the political decisions behind the effort "to keep China in the war."
While the Hump is worth reading, according to the chart on page 239, over nintey-five percent of the tonnage delivered over the hump did not go to the Nationalist Chinese, but went to 14th Air Force and other forces under US leadership.This would seem to contradict the implication in the rest of the text that the main purpose of flying the hump was to supply the Chinese.Also, early in the text we are informed that a "Captain Chennault" was recommended for retirement. The text implies Chennault retired and became a military advisor for the Chinese.However, by page 128 Chennault is a major general.The contractions regarding tonnage deliveries and the career of Chennault, who plays an important role, might have been explained away somewhere in the text, but such explanations were lost on this reviewer.
Still the Hump is impressive effort. The bibliography and author's notes is over fifty pages long. As a compendium of facts and figures, as well as an analysis of the emergence air transport as part of overall military doctrine the Hump rates five stars. But as a book for the general reader it rates only four stars.
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A Bull in China: Investing Profitably in the World's Greatest Market Review

A Bull in China: Investing Profitably in the World's Greatest Market
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A Bull in China: Investing Profitably in the World's Greatest Market ReviewFor a book whose the back-cover screams "Indiana Jones of Investing", the author thankfully sets realistic expectations in the introduction chapter and adopts a sane tone (different from the cheerleader hysteria or end of the world tone adopted by most investing books). Rogers starts off by saying that "this is not a catalog of hot tips or even recommendations", but a "survey of happenings" in China. The reader is well served with that approach. He also re-iterates his oft stated opinion - short the dollar, long commodities, and learn Chinese!
In the first chapter, Rogers takes the reader through the different shares classes in China and some history on the evolution of the stock exchanges in that country. Chapter 2 provides his assessment of the different risks faced by China. His bias towards investing in China as opposed to India is quite apparent in a rather superficial comparison (readers wanting a more detailed comparison could benefit from a recent book - The Elephant and the Dragon: The Rise of India and China and What It Means for All of Us). It is hard to argue that the first two chapters provide the informed reader anything substantially new, but positioning that discussion with a quasi-travelogue is very entertaining.
Throughout the book, Rogers provides a list of companies that are relevant to the trends/observations in a section (Jims Sino Files!). To me, these lists seemed like an excellent way to understand the landscape of Chinese economy (high level, but still a good picture) and to create a watch list for IPOs! An overwhelming majority of the companies in the list do not trade as ADRs - most in Hong Kong or only in China. Rogers mentions where the stock is traded if at all, and provides the 3 year trends on profits and revenues. (sadly, it doesn't have any information on operating margins). Listing the companies along with his observations on a particular topic, as opposed to burying them in an appendix is a good choice.
Chapter 2 also talks about aero-defense-industrial materials sector companies, with the section on water purification the most interesting. The third chapter focuses on household names ranging from grocers to insurance companies and also highlights the top 5 innovators. (one wonders the lead time for editing these books, because the author still has Alibaba's IPO as a planned one...any reader who has watched CNBC or reading blogs should be aware that this was a big deal a few weeks ago...). The next chapter focuses on the energy sector. Using some startling statistics (most of them are cited, so a reader has to be content with the interpretation Rogers provides) talks about coal, hydro-electricity, wind power and nuclear energy. The list of companies involved in these sectors is an excellent source for China watchers/investors. (while Rogers identifies some companies that derive indirect benefit from these trends, some omissions is intriguing - Fuel Tech (FTEK) for coal industry is one of them). Chapters 5 and 6 talk about transportation and tourism respectively - the latter providing a much better reading than the former. The next chapter on agriculture is perhaps the most unique discussion in the book. Covering a wide range of topics from seeds to fertilizers to animal husbandry to wineries, the chapter paints a very vivid picture of the agriculture sector and identifies the key players.
Rogers seems to be running out of patience when he reaches Chapter 8, where he clubs Health, Education and Housing in a single "service sector" oriented chapter. The discussion highlights some interesting trends overall, but misses the relatively more detailed context provided in previous chapters. Nevertheless, an informative chapter, despite not mentioning any of the recent darlings in the stock market - EJ Holdings (real estate) and WuXi (WX - medical research outsourcer).
Chapter 9, the most important one in the book, provides his prognosis for the different sectors/themes with a view of "possibly plunking your money in them someday"! An excellent read and worth buying the book for this chapter alone.
The reader should also search some of the investment blogs such as Seeking Alpha to read recent interviews of Rogers regarding this book and his opinion on the current investment climate in China. The author cautions that one cannot predict whether a bubble is imminent or not, but suggests to keep monitoring the landscape for potential long term investments. That sanity is welcome!
The Appendix seems to be an after-thought and not particularly useful, and there is no list of citations for the more serious reader. Another book worth keeping in the radar is From Wall Street to the Great Wall: How Investors Can Profit from China's Booming Economy.
The writing style is very conversational and easy-flowing. The part travelogue aspect of the narration sustains the interest level of the reader throughout the discussions.
All in all, for the price of a few lattes, you can get first-hand information on the landscape of Chinese economy in a wide variety of sectors, and an excellent concluding chapter that could serve as a good framework for investing in China. A must read for any serious investor.A Bull in China: Investing Profitably in the World's Greatest Market Overview

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American Wheels, Chinese Roads: The Story of General Motors in China Review

American Wheels, Chinese Roads: The Story of General Motors in China
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American Wheels, Chinese Roads: The Story of General Motors in China ReviewWhile the story of GM in China might not appeal to everyone, this book surely will. The book is a well written novel with an eccentric cast of characters. I found myself laughing out loud at least once every chapter and simply couldn't put it down.
The book is filled with stories and anecdotes about doing business in China that are both hilarious and educational.
"Chinese people are very careful with accounts. They watch the money. Someone has to pay for things, and the Chinese always prefer that someone to be someone else.
'Keep the Change,' an expression so familiar to Americans, would sound naive or idiotic (or both) to the average Chinese. To them, money is still a scarce resource. You don't just let someone keep the change."
It is very refreshing to hear the story not from an academic perspective, but from someone who speaks and reads Chinese and has built and operated a business in China and S.E. Asia for over 20 years. The book screams of the challenges, pain and daily grind of building a business in China. From the day you hail a taxi, to navigating the government regulation to the endless changing of the rules and goalposts, Mr. Dunne describes competing inside China as "a street fight with a veneer of civility". Anyone who has never done business in China will find themselves saying over and over and over again "That doesn't seem fair."
The U.S. Government should read Mr. Dunne's three policy recommendations with regard to the Chinese selling their cars in America.
Will GM prevail in the long run? (I sincerely doubt it - but I look forward to reading the follow-up).American Wheels, Chinese Roads: The Story of General Motors in China Overview

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National Geographic Atlas of China Review

National Geographic Atlas of China
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National Geographic Atlas of China ReviewThis is not a cartographic atlas... more an atlas of maps to understand China, to get a sense of how it is put together. There are regional maps and some city maps, but the real action is in the infographics.
Which areas are fertile plains, which arid, which mountainous and green? What are the population densities per region? Where is Internet use concentrated? How are languages distributed across the region? Where are the water flows, the catchments? Where does wheat grow, corn, rice?
If you're looking for a street map, it's better to buy one locally... rapid change means details change. But if you're looking to understand the big factors driving China, then this National Geographic atlas is a wonderful, innovative resource.National Geographic Atlas of China Overview

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Lost on Planet China: The Strange and True Story of One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation or How He Became Comfortable Eating Live Squid Review

Lost on Planet China: The Strange and True Story of One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation or How He Became Comfortable Eating Live Squid
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Lost on Planet China: The Strange and True Story of One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation or How He Became Comfortable Eating Live Squid ReviewI like Maarten: he's half Czech, I'm half Czech; he's actually lived in Port Vila Vanuatu with his wife, I've actually lived in Port Vila Vanuatu with my wife. In addition, he is much funnier than I am. His books about the South Pacific ("The Sex Lives of Cannibals" [SLC] and "Getting Stoned with Savages" [GSWS]) were hoots, and very accurate from what I can attest to from having spent time in some of the same places (Vanuatu and Fiji).
In "Lost on Planet China" (LPC) Maarten is still funny, but much less so in this book than in his two previous works. I counted five personal "laugh out louds" from LPC, as opposed to the dozens and dozens of "laugh out louds" I experienced from both SLC and GSWS. I found his personal opinions usually reasonable (having spent some time in China, I disagree with some of those other reviewers apparently offended by Maarten's honesty), but some of his jokes began to become repetitious (example: by the time he is blaming George Bush for not getting served meatballs in Xian I actually closed the book for a day - this was approximately tenth time a similar "W" attempt at humor was clumsily inserted). But mostly, the editing of LPC is horrible. He mentions at the end (in his Acknowledgements) that his editor was giving birth during the time she was editing one of his chapters. Actually, it reads as if she was giving birth during the last 1/4 of the book. This end section is disjointed, confusing (example: a reference is made to something that apparently happened earlier during Maarten's trip, but which seems to have been redacted out of an earlier chapter), and frequently just plain boring.
This book is like we've started on a very interesting trip of discovery together with a person you know with a reputation for being funny. Things start well, as time goes on you have some minor issues, but you are still enjoying yourself and learning. Then things begin to get disorganized and you actually start to wonder why you are still going along. It's not just that China is complex (as the author keeps pointing out), it's because the trip itself is beginning to seem pointless. You keep thinking it's got to get better, and despite a few brief respites, it does not get better. Even though the first 250-300 pages are good, the last 100 pages are a chore and leave you with a bad taste in your mouth. Or maybe it's the live squids.
One final thought: although I doubt that Maarten had anything to do with the map, it is rather interesting. Taiwan appears to be a province of the PRC - Broadway Books does not apparently consider the ROC as a separate country - yet Tibet appears (judging by the typeface) to be some sort of separate country. Complex indeed.
Lost on Planet China: The Strange and True Story of One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation or How He Became Comfortable Eating Live Squid Overview

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