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Books
"I am famous, everyone knows me, but I have no money!"Posted by Brendan O'Kane, March 13, 2005 9:41 AM
There's an interesting article by Mike Meyer in this week's NYTimes Book Review about publishing in China. Downstairs, the crowds are dense and the juxtapositions jarring. ''Monica's Story'' lies between Bill Clinton's and Hillary Clinton's autobiographies. A box set of books about Hermann Goering rubs shoulders with ''What's Behind Jewish Excellence?'' American titles in Chinese translation range from the predictable -- ''The Da Vinci Code'' and the Atkins diet -- to the surprising: Henry Rollins's ''Get in the Van,'' a memoir of his punk years, and a collection of Woody Allen books whose Chinese title promises ''Mensa Whores.'' Well worth a look. |
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Books on China
Foreign journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao : Paul French, author of a book on Carl Crow has written a book about the lives and exploits of foreign journalists reporting from China from the 1820s to 1949.
Earnshaw Books' Tales of Old Peking: Tales from Old Peking is available from Earnshaw Books, and like its sister, Tales from Old Shanghai is a book of fragments of information about periods, events or places in Beijing's history, collaging together pictures and text about eunuchs, concubines, the Lama Temple, Opium Wars, art, emperors, and a miscellany of other interesting topics
Henry F. Pringle's "Bridge House Survivor": Pringle was imprisoned by Japanese forces from October 1942 to August 1945, and Bridge House Survivor, available from Earnshaw Books, is his harrowing account of torture under the Japanese.
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+ A short interview with Muzi Mei (2004.02): Danwei interviews Muzi Mei + CCTV vs. classic movies (2006.03): A rundown of several pastiches of Chinese movies appearing online as 大史记 - "The Year That Was". Some from CCTV, others not. With links to video. + Street hawker cries of Beijing (2006.12): Yang Changhe demonstrates hawker's cries in a video shot by Muzimei.
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