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-   -   Lost On Planet China (https://www.fodors.com/community/asia/lost-on-planet-china-761668/)

Gpanda Jan 24th, 2009 12:09 PM

MaryA-I will give it a try.

ekscrunchy Jan 25th, 2009 07:41 AM

Harumph!!!!!!

Ekscrunchy recommends the boof and Panda takes no notice. It is only after said boof is recommended by Marya does the black-and-white furry one deign to take the suggestion!

Gpanda Jan 25th, 2009 10:06 AM

I don't want to distract EKS from her holy mission. You should have been there in my third grade class when I gave a boof report.

ekscrunchy Jan 26th, 2009 06:00 AM

UMMM, Senor Panda--If you take your nose away from your boof, you will notice a new addition to an old thread on this board.

Gpanda Jan 26th, 2009 01:57 PM

Duly noted. The end appears nearly upon us. Break out the calculator. I hope you can think exponentially.

ekscrunchy Jan 26th, 2009 03:14 PM

What does exponentially mean???

Gpanda Jan 26th, 2009 05:01 PM

I'm not explaining the difference between an arithmetic and an exponential progression. I will merely say that the penaly will need several commas and no decimal points.

Craig Jan 30th, 2009 12:16 PM

Well, I hope that I can bring this thread back to a semblance of not being hijacked. Andy, do read Gifford's China Road. It's a quick read and gives great insight into the country and it's future. I would say it's a must for anyone planning on going there.

Gpanda Jan 30th, 2009 12:48 PM

Thanks Craig. I've diverted so many threads in the past that it would small of me (an oxymoron for a giant panda) to mind if any thread of mine is diverted (a much nicer term than hijacked).

Hannue Feb 1st, 2009 07:38 AM

I'm usually travelling or writing so don't read as much as I'd like. I also kind of avoid reading certain books so as to write originally.

My recommendation is my book from Tibet, Dialogues Tibetan Dialogues Han.

http://www.amazon.com/Dialogues-Tibe.../dp/9889799936

marya_ Feb 1st, 2009 08:28 AM

I can't resist throwing another title into the mix for those preparing to get lost on planet China.

If you are someone who appreciates slow travel or, better yet, staying put long enough to consider a faraway land a second home, have a look at Michael Meyer's book: THE LAST DAYS OF OLD BEIJING: Life in the Vanishing Backstreets of a City Transformed.

Meyer, an American who originally spent time in China as a Peace Corps volunteer and then studied Mandarin at Tsinghua, lived in a Beijing hutong and volunteer-taught English in a local elementary school for two years. His story is both a charmingly intimate portrait of the relationships he developed and a tutorial on Beijing hutong life over the ages and cataclysmic changes brought by dynastic changes, revolution, liberation and so forth, leading up to the massive -- and massively destructive -- urban "renewal" efforts linked to the 2008 Olympics. More than that, the book is a tribute or even a love song, an effort to preserve in written form that which may not survive in architectural form except as cultural relic.

I obviously recommend this book as a Westerner with limited knowledge about China and a lot of questions triggered by the experiences I had in Beijing a few years ago. It is a pleasure to read and helps me to understand some of the bewildering things about Beijing. I wish that someone with deeper knowledge of the city could weigh in on such a title and make other recommendations. (Peter N-H, are you out there?)

Mango7 Feb 1st, 2009 09:24 AM

Tis a shame for the interest in such a crappy country imo.

marya_ Feb 1st, 2009 11:20 AM

Yes, but, as you suggest the key word is "interest." I don't see how we can fail to be interested in them...And aren't our fortunes intertwined at this point?

"Interest" isn't tantamount to rapture... or even approval.

Gifford's and Meyer's books do a creditable job in identifying and exploring some of the difficult issues that concern people observing China's rise. I'd like to find more such sources.

Gpanda Feb 2nd, 2009 03:54 PM

OK, my Amazon order just arrived. Let the reading begin. The faithful posters had better hope that I like these books. hell hath no fury like a Panda bored.

marya_ Feb 2nd, 2009 05:24 PM

If you are stirred to wrath, just don't bite any of the tourists to your PRC (if anyone still calls it the People's Republic of Cambridge).

We expect boof reports, or at least a thumbs up/thumbs down.

I just picked up Shanghainese's recommendation -- Cecilia' Chiang's THE SEVENTH DAUGHTER.



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