Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Elsie Choy. By The Chinese University Press.
Sells new for $32.00.
There are some available for $18.50.
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No comments about Leaves of Prayer (Academic Monographs on Chinese Literature).
Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Rochelle O'Neal Thorpe. By BookSurge Publishing.
Sells new for $18.99.
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1 comments about The Majestic Crane [English / Chinese / Traditional]: An African American Girl's Unique Journey to Asian Culture.
- I enjoyed reading this book. It's about a young girl growing up in America who aspires to learn more about other cultures. While growing up, she moves to different parts of the United States and experiences the different cultures from the south to the north. It's not just about the African-American experience, it's about growing up and realizing that there's more to the world than what's just immediately around you.
The illustrations by Kaji Aso are wonderful. A Japanese artist illustrating the life of an American who grows up to live in China shows the multiculturalism that is possible. I also like that each page has the corresponding Chinese translation on the opposite page. One can imagine two young girls, one on each side of the world, reading the same book at the same time and imagining the life of the other.
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Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Florence Wheelock Ayscough. By Houghton Mifflin Co.
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No comments about The autobiography of a Chinese dog,.
Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Ruth Hayhoe. By Women's Press (UK).
The regular list price is $29.95.
Sells new for $29.94.
There are some available for $28.45.
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No comments about Full Circle a Life with Hong Kong & Chi.
Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by James R. Ross. By Northeastern.
The regular list price is $28.95.
Sells new for $4.40.
There are some available for $1.05.
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1 comments about Caught In A Tornado: A Chinese American Woman Survives the Cultural Revolution.
- This Cultural Revolution memoir is somewhat unique in that it is about an American born Chinese woman who returned to China before WWII and decided to stay after Mao came to power. She got tired of her philandering spendthrift husband, left him in Hong Kong, and decided to become an English teacher in Shanghai to be near her three grown children. Wen, Zengde was 66 years old in 1976 when the decade long Cultural Revolution started. There is another similar book also by an elderly woman, Nien Cheng, Life and Death in Shanghai, but I got board with it and didn't get past the first few chapters. Caught in a Tornado is a pretty fast read. Many Chinese committed suicide, especially the elderly who had less reason to endure the torment of the Cultural Revolution being so near the end of their lives, but Wen bravely stuck it out. She endured repeated beatings and interrogations, mostly from her students who served as the thought police, and survived. I suspect the ordeal shortened her life, however, because her sister who spent life in America lived to be at least 102. Wen passed away at 88. This book is short and provides a good overview of the sufferings and insanity that prevailed during the Cultural Revolution. Most appalling were the accounts of children turning on, and in some cases, killing parents and cannibalism in Guangxi Province; see the book Scarlet Memorial; read it on an empty stomach and keep in mind that the atrocities were mostly committed by ignorant peasants absent religious beliefs.
The parallels between Mao's China and Afghanistan under the Taliban are pretty striking. Change China to Afghanistan, Mao to Allah, Mao's red book of quotations to the Qu'ran, and the Red Guards to the Taliban. The Four Olds could be men without beards, women unveiled, music and movies, schools other than madrasas, and any book besides the Qu'ran. In both cases schools were shut down and only one subject was allowed to be studied; in Afghanistan it was the Qu'ran (the Taliban's interpretation) and in China it was Mao's book of quotations. Both the Red Guards and the Taliban were able to break into any home anytime and destroy or confiscate items deemed counter-revolutionary or un-Islamic. Those perceived as not complying with the extremists, physically or mentally, were beaten, imprisoned, and sometimes murdered. The Red Guards attacked those in western dress, especially women with "unrevolutionary" bourgeois hair styles and make up. The Taliban did the same thing to women who dared to show their hair, faces, or leave the house without a male relative escort. They also attacked men for not having foot long beards. The only difference is that membership in the Red Guards, while restricted by class background, was open to both genders.
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Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Monica Sorensen. By Minnesota Dept. of Transportation.
There are some available for $2.65.
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No comments about Beyond the Earth (Sky's the limit).
Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Julia K. Murray. By Harvard University Art Museums.
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No comments about Last of the Mandarins: Chinese Calligraphy and Painting from the F.Y. Chang Collection.
Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Robin Hutcheon. By Chinese Univ Pr.
The regular list price is $18.51.
Sells new for $78.47.
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No comments about First Sea Lord: The Life and Work of Sir Y. K. Pao.
Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Dorothy Hoobler and Thomas Hoobler. By Heinemann Library.
The regular list price is $27.11.
Sells new for $3.25.
There are some available for $0.01.
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No comments about Chinese Portraits (Images Across the Ages).
Posted in Chinese (Tuesday, October 7, 2008)
Written by Adeline Yen Mah. By Penguin Books Ltd (1994).
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No comments about Falling Leaves Return to Their Roots: The True Story of an Unwanted Chinese Daughter.
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