Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Review: Lost on Planet China

I found this book on MP3 audio at the Lawrence Library. His introductory admission that he is, in no sense, an authority on China nor on any things Chinese, drug me into this book.

While an admitted non-authority, he did offer an honest and perceptive first hand account of his travels in China. Also, his research and journalists eye for detail and social criticism - - combined with a trenchant sense of humor (3/4 reviewers online have called it rollicking) reminded me of my time in the middle kingdom.

His irreverent social criticism - and his multi-national perspective (he's some sort of Dutch / Czech/ Canadian living mostly in California) should appeal to the traditionally aged students at our school, though he drops the f-bomb a couple times in the first chapter, and the mofo-bomb a couple times in a clever and funny recollection of his meth-addled neighbors in Sacramento. He seems to be a devoted family man - who none-the-less speaks candidly of the unclear roles of, for instance, the student/ "take out girl" or the factory girl "Cinderella." These moral ambiguities are part of the mystery of the east, he reasons. In his humor, I detect an elusive and indelicate truth.

I'm halfway through the book, but the following comments brought back memories, and reminded me of some of the visceral first impressions I'd forgotten, such as:

Pollution
  • "700,000 people per year die just from breathing the air" - the air pollution in China is unimaginably bad. 1/3 of the pollution in California, he asserts, comes originally from China. - and has survived the 4000 miles of ocean.
  • 1/3 (or 2/3rds) of all the water in China is unfit for even industrial use. It's too polluted for even use to make leaded paint.
  • Air quality in Beijing is 3 times worse than what the level at which we tell children and the elderly to stay indoors because of unacceptable danger. If that link is correct - he may have understated .
Culture
  • "I was finally having an authentic Chinese experience: It was awful." Here he spoke of a train ride. The second-hand smoke recollections rang a bell.
  • Chinese culture has a unique approach to queuing up - or waiting in line. It's a contact sport more akin to football than anything in the west. It has to be experienced to be understood.
  • The interactions with food (including experiences eating sheep brains, frog, and live squid).
  • The way the Chinese call out Lao Wai when they see a foreigner - his Chinese language skills aren't stellar, but he figures out it means something negative. In Taiwan the meaning is much like the n-word here, or the c-word. It may mean something less negative in China - but considering how the attitudes toward human rights differ - I'm not sure we can ever make easy comparisons. That said, I cringe every time he uses the term. It might be his causal honesty, or that refreshing wise but clueless - eyes wide open stance of his that I initially found endearing.
The MP3 lasts 11 hours, and I regret not being able to bookmark pages - but I'm diggin' it.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

what I'm reading - for fun

I'm reading Chinese Americans by Kwong and Miscevic. I'm barely into it and I've learned:

  • America's favorite cherry - the large, sweet and succulent Bing - was developed by Ah Bing, a Chinese immigrant horticulturalist, in 1875.
  • Lue Gim Gong, the father of the Florida citrus industry, developed the frost resistant orange tree in 1888.
  • The best doctors in the old west were Chinese traditional herbalists (btw: the Chinese knew how to prevent scurvy by at least the 1400's).
  • The Chinese American community had it's share of gunfighters.
  • Keno was brought to America by Chinese immigrants - originally called "pak kop piu" (white pigeon ticket).
  • 25% of miners by 1850 were Chinese.
  • it was no coincidence the large #'s of Chinese laborers came to the US during the heat of the slavery debate that lead up to the civil war. And plantations in the south sought to replace African American slaves with Chinese indentured workers (who didn't get the vote until the 20th century?) That didn't work out.
There's so much from this book I don't want to forget. I will post again on it ASAP, but I only get to read it during my son's nap and sometimes before bed.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Book Report: Brothers

Brothers, by Yu Hua is available in Chinese or English, and in Audiobook form at the Lawrence Public Library. It's long - but I loved it.

The New York Times says
“Brothers” is, in fact, very much a social novel of the late 20th century. It deals with the emergence of China as a capitalist market state, a story familiar to anyone who reads the newspapers, and it’s as blunt, puerile, libidinous and trashily sentimental as any 24 hours of American reality TV. All that ought to make it a blockbuster in the West, as it has been in China, where on its release in 2005 and 2006 (in two volumes) it sold more than a million copies....Imagine a novel written by William Dean Howells together with D. H. Lawrence, updated by Tom Wolfe and then filmed by Baz Luhrmann, and you’ll have some idea of what “Brothers” would be like, had it originated in the West.
It has been criticized as low-brow and crass (especially at home in China), but I doubt anyone who actually read The Faire Queene or Ubu Roi would say that. The author also wrote To Live, which became an amazing movie that China banned - which of course made it a monumental best seller there and abroad.

Book Report: Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress

This novel by Dai Sijie, is available in Chinese or English - and can be found in audio format in English. Set during the cultural revolution, it treats the it's protagonists with warmth and humor - and the book has been well received critically. It has love, illicit sex, betrayal, and references to western literature. It's set where I've traveled - and I've included some personal pictures - and I may need to tell my story of the young toughs, the stick of dynamite and the Red Chinese Army soldiers. Synopsis: I was clever, something very bad happened, and it wasn't my fault; but this post is about someone else's story.

Characters:
  1. Ma - our narrator most of the time. Dr's kid. 18 ?
  2. Luo - Dentist's kid. 19
  3. The Little Seamstress (aka: ) age? Innocent or sex kitten?
  4. Tailor
  5. Village chief - ex opium grower.
Setting
Phoenix mountain near ChengDu, Yunnan? Year (?)

Books worth reading.

Pictures from my travel in the area