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Aftersleep Books
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River Town Two Years on the YangtzeThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
Hessler is not only a good writer, who writes compelling and lurid prose, but he is an honest story-teller, especially in telling his own story. What makes this book an especially good read for me is that he doesn't leave out the negative or the positive. This is a truly subjective account of HIS experiences in China as a teacher, as a Peace Corps volunteer, as a young man, and as an American. Hessler doesn't try to show a "real" China objectively - he knows well enough that it doesn't exist. All he can tell us is China as he experienced it, and that's exactly what he gives us, warts and all. I am especially grateful that he never shied away from commenting on the negative and the positive aspects of the communist China government and ideology as it affects the nation and the people, and also showing us how some of the Chinese embrace it totally, and others are not so keen on it and desire something more.
And because of that honesty, I can feel that I am there riding along with him. Thankfully, he took copious notes and kept a journal while he was in China - the insertions of his English student's writings are a wonderful addition to the book, and through them, we all get some of the story of the students he taught, and also a better insight into Chinese thought processes than we could ever know purely through description.
Hessler knows the importance of telling one's story, and letting other people tell their own story, and I enjoyed every moment of this book and was saddened when he left China, for I knew that was the end of the book.
I will look for more of Hessler's work. This book hooked me.