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Schoolfu.com Seeks Bloggers

This is a recruitment advertisement. Please contact the advertiser directly if you are interested. See all job ads or place a job ad.

The latest and greatest blog for China expat families, Schoolfu.com, seeks bloggers.

  • Are you a Beijing baba?
  • Are you a Shanghai mama?
  • Are you a student who wants to get published?

Then we are looking for you. Schoolfu.com brings together voices from the community to share tips on fun activities, advice on adapting to China, the latest on health issues and the low-down on international schools plus whatever else is on your mind. Doesn’t matter if you live in Shenzhen, Changchun, Shunyi or Hongqiao, we want to hear what you have to say about making the most of your family’s life in China.

If you are interested, write to Lee Mack at leeallenmack@gmail.com or give him a call at Tel: 010-6528-1840 ext 6327

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Tales of Old Hong Kong: The new Tales of Old Hong Kong compiled by Derek Sandhaus is available at Earnshaw Books.
Diamond Hill by Feng Chi-shun: Feng's memoir Diamond Hill describes an era of gambling and gangsters, Suzie Wong and squatter villages, fires and food stalls, and the Kowloon Walled City and its white powder. "A time when people were poor, but life was rich," he says. The world that he grew up in no longer exists, but his book - the first ever on the Diamond Hill refugee settlement, in either Chinese or English - offers a candid picture of what life was like for most Hong Kong residents in the 1950s.
William A. Callahan's China: The Pessoptimist Nation: China: The Pessoptimist Nation shows how the heart of Chinese foreign policy is not a security dilemma, but an identity dilemma. Through a careful analysis of how Chinese people understand their new place in the world, the book charts how Chinese identity emerges through the interplay of positive and negative feelings in a dynamic that intertwines China's domestic and international politics.
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+ Two decades of profitable Chinese book agents (2007.05): An Min (安民) writes in Southern Weekly (南方周末) about Chinese book agents (书商) and Xue Mili (雪米莉).
+ Some questions about SARFT's full-stop for Red Question Mark (2007.09): SARFT axes Red Question Mark (红问号). He Dong (何东) responds.
+ Migrant worker blues: Who cares? by Bruce Humes (2006.09): Bruce Humes reviews two recent books about migrants in China: 'I Shall Shed No Tears' (我的眼泪不会掉下来) by Wang Lili and 'La Promesse de Shanghai' by Stephane Fiere.
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