Ratings5
Average rating4.6
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Hessler's writing is both lively and clear, and in this book, he successfully combines his personal experience (as a former teacher and as a journalist in Beijing) with a somewhat more detached observation of historical events.
I found a great deal to relate to here, as well. First, he taught English in a Chinese university, and a couple of decades earlier I taught English, also in the Peace Corps, at a Korean university. Second, while my later work took me to Singapore, I became a student of China and the Chinese language, and I found the information about the oracle bones to be fascinating. (I had, of course, heard about the oracle bones, but the book provides more background on the bones themselves and the researchers who worked with them). Third, while working for the World Bank I also was in China at the time of the NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, so Hessler's discussion of the reaction of his contacts in China at that time was interesting. (We were advised to keep a low profile at that time, which we did.) Fourth, Hessler's friendship with the Uighur man he calls “Polat” also struck me because of the time I spent in the '90s in Kazakhstan, a country that neighbors on China's Xinjiang region. Polat, after he moves to the US, ends up living in my old neighborhood just north of Chinatown in DC, yet another detail to which I could relate.
I bought this book shortly after it came out in 2006, but I've only now taken it off the shelf to read. Better late than never. Terrific book.
Parts of this book I loved and parts I wasn't interested in at all. Hessler wanders all over the place, talking to people in China, average people, oddball people. Hessler showed me things about China I'd never thought existed, including ethnic minorities and the slow economic changes occurring.