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CHINA BOOKS

Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Journey to the North of India, overland from England, through Russia, Persia, and Affghaunistaun: Volume 1 Written by Arthur Conolly. By Adamant Media Corporation. Sells new for $26.99.
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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

In Secret Mongolia (Mystic Traveller) Written by Henning Haslund. By Adventures Unlimited Press. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $13.22. There are some available for $13.00.
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2 comments about In Secret Mongolia (Mystic Traveller).
  1. This book is comparable to the stories told by explorers of the Americas of how hard it was to survive outside of one's own culture in a time without our modern amenities like a phone, a translation dictionary, or a guide to local customs. I read it while I was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Mongolia in 1996 and it helped me understand how much life had changed there in the past ninety years.


  2. This book is one mans recollections of his time spent in Mongolia during the 1920s. Haslund was part of a group of Danes who set out to Mongolia in order to set up a farm in remote Mongolia. During this time period it was similar to the wild west with tribal warlords of various ethnicities as well as communist Russians on one side, and the Chinese on the other.

    Haslund recounts his various adventures and interactions with warlords, Shamans, his short stay in a Siberian prison after a case of mistaken identity, dealing with the harsh climate and environment of that part of the world, the setting up of the farm. Lots of great observances of the culture, customs and the nature in Mongolia.

    This book reads like a Jack London story except its for real. It really is amazing how tough and self sufficent these guys had to be to pound out an existence in that part of the world. Haslund doesn't slip into any corny tough guy semantics though. He is very matter of fact about the dangers and hardships that he dealt with. To me this book is one of the great unknown books. I currently live in Denmark and I've yet to meet a Dane who has even heard of Haslund or this book.


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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Travels from St. Petersburg in Russia, to Diverse Parts of Asia: Volume 2 Written by John Bell. By Adamant Media Corporation. Sells new for $17.99.
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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Journey to the North of India, overland from England, through Russia, Persia, and Affghaunistaun: Volume 2 Written by Arthur Conolly. By Adamant Media Corporation. Sells new for $29.99.
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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Vera Schwarcz. By Yale University Press. The regular list price is $45.00. Sells new for $6.00. There are some available for $1.10.
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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Tino Turtle Travels to Beijing, China Written by Carolyn L. Ahern. By Tino Turtle Travels, LLC. Sells new for $19.95.
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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Hong Kong: Front Door/Back Door Written by Michael Wolf and Kenneth Baker. By Thames & Hudson. The regular list price is $75.00. Sells new for $43.82. There are some available for $19.60.
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1 comments about Hong Kong: Front Door/Back Door.
  1. The Architecture of Density

    Words: Rebecca Walker
    Images: www.photomichaelwolf.com

    German-born photographer Michael Wolf has been described by some as `humanly alert'. KEE talks to him about the urban dynamics of a complex culture.

    Michael Wolf views ordinary things in extraordinary ways. Culturally astute, Wolf's artistic inspiration comes from the local culture in which he immerses himself. Wolf has been fascinated by China's complex urban dynamics since moving to Asia as a contract photographer 10 years ago and his photography focuses on the idiosyncrasies of the Asian way of life. Insightful and absorbing, his latest book "Hong Kong, The Front Door/The Back Door" deals with the SAR's cultural identity through depictions of the city's architecture.

    Wolf was born in Munich and grew up in the USA. He began a career in photography after graduating from the University of Essen in Germany, freelancing for various international publications including Time, Spiegel and Stern. In the early 1990s Wolf had an epiphany. "I was sitting in my room in Amsterdam and suddenly knew I needed to make a big change in my life. I had a picture of the globe in my head and when I came to Asia I knew that was where I needed to go."

    His decision was a good one and it was in China that he found his ultimate inspiration. "I love the visual chaos of China. It is a photographers dream," says the photographer. Wolf's poignant portrayals of the lives and living conditions of his cultural environment are subjective and personal and have earned him international acclaim. As described by Art Critic Kenneth Baker, "By their formal intelligence and acuity of observation, Wolf's Hong Kong pictures easily earn the status of art works."

    Wolf's first book, "China in Transition" (2001) documents the disappearing grandeur of the Middle Kingdom in China. It is a compelling portrait of old culture embarking into modernity and casts a moving gaze at China and its people on the threshold of the third millennium. His second book, "Sitting in China" (2002) depicts a multifaceted China, from its chairs to the mindset of its people. Through a diverse assortment of compelling images, Wolf documents the beauty of the ugly, the stretching of time, the art of improvisation, and the nature of the stool as a portrait of its user. He often depicts discarded objects of the man-made world in his photographs and is interested in the "beauty inherent in used objects." He explains, "My parents are both artists and from an early age my mother took me to flea markets to rummage through a myriad of used knick-knacks. I love pattern and character, and the feeling that something has a history."

    Wolf's third book, "Chinese Propaganda Posters" (2003) showcases his vast personal collection of colourful propagandist artworks and cultural artifacts produced between the birth of the People's Republic of China in 1949 and the early 1980s. "Chinese Propaganda Posters" is whimsically structured to correspond with the chapters of Mao's Red Book and gives a sense of how the illiterate masses used images to define themselves in Communist China. "The posters give a sense of how the Chinese viewed their future at that time. The discrepancy between fantasy and reality really fascinates me and the posters are also very stylistically beautiful."

    In his latest release, "Hong Kong: Front Door/Back Door" (2005), Wolf continues to explore the theme of the organic metropolis. Hong Kong is one of the most densely populated metropolitan areas in the world and Wolf's photographs seek out the human spirit in the urban jungle. The images in the book depict the high-rises that shape the spatial experience of Hong Kong's citizens. Since Wolf himself is one of those citizens (he has been a Hong Kong resident since 1994), his photographs have a distinctively personal essence. "To me the concept of the `back-door' is far more interesting than the front. The back alleys contain a tremendous visual wealth. When you enter through the font door of someone's house you see what they want you to see: the best version. The back door on the other hand tells a culture's true story."

    A close look at one of Wolf's architectural images uncovers irregularities such as plants, laundry and scaffolding that interrupt the orderly design of monolithic apartment buildings. The monotonous regularity of each façade is given a distinct personality through human details. "When people don't have enough space, they improvise and adapt. There are many symbols of Chinese thriftiness in the book that are very telling of the Eastern mindset. In the West we throw things away when they break. In the East people take the time to fix things, it doesn't matter what things look like, as long as they work."

    Thought-provoking texts by art critic Kenneth Baker and designer Douglas Young are included in "Front Door/Back Door". The two pay a humanistic tribute to the ingenuity of city-dwellers and their content examines peoples' lifestyle choices and explores the concepts of form, function, identity, and design. As stated by Baker in the book's introduction: "The new Hong Kong residential architecture has turned the lives of the Hong Kong people inside-out." This assertion is supported by Young who says, "Buildings that begin as monoliths are slowly humanised by their inhabitants; architecture becomes a framework upon which people can hang their personal personalities."

    Young describes Hong Kong as a "city of contrasts" and says, "Architects (in Hong Kong) have ingeniously stretched the tolerance of strict building codes by squeezing as many households as possible into a given site." Wolf chose to collaborate with Young and Baker on this project because he was drawn to their cultural knowledge and artistic sensibility. "Douglas Young has a very interesting local vision of Hong Kong whereas Kenneth Baker puts the photographs into context artistically on an international level."

    Wolf's interest in the people and societal changes taking place in China earned his images first prize in the `Contemporary Issues' section of the 2005 World Press Photo Awards. Held annually, the awards have come to be regarded as the most prestigious for photojournalism in the world. Says Wolf, "I have been a photojournalist for over 30 years, so it's great to be rewarded for all my hard work."

    Wolf is interested in exploring a wide range of multi-faceted artistic pursuits and says he has an ever-increasing urge to work on his own projects. His installation art piece, "The Real Toy Story", is one such example. In 2004 he spent four weeks collecting over 20,000 toys from various charity shops and flea-markets, all with `Made in China' stamps. He then visited five toy factories in China where he photographed the workers producing the toys and the resulting artwork was an elaborate installation that incorporated 16,000 toys and embedded photographs. The installation was extremely well received by art critics worldwide and will be exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago in 2006.

    With the next 12 months booked in advance, Wolf shows no sign of slowing down. He stands by his motto: "If you are a vision and real conviction, you will find success." And that he has.


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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Beijing Then and Now (Then & Now Thunder Bay) Written by Brian Page. By Thunder Bay Press. The regular list price is $18.95. Sells new for $10.67. There are some available for $11.77.
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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

The Great Wall of China Written by Daniel Schwartz and Jorge Luis Borges and Franz Kafka and Zhewen Luo. By Thames & Hudson. The regular list price is $39.95. Sells new for $22.99. There are some available for $4.00.
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Posted in China (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Guide to Hiking China's Old Road to Shu Written by Hope Justman. By iUniverse, Inc.. The regular list price is $27.95. Sells new for $17.47. There are some available for $28.26.
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1 comments about Guide to Hiking China's Old Road to Shu.
  1. This book is great. I know the author and had an opportunity to do some editing on it prior to publication. I am joining the author in China mid-March for our second trip to do some light hiking and touristing. I have found the book very useful, especially the detail she gives regarding both preparations and the actual journey itself.


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Journey to the North of India, overland from England, through Russia, Persia, and Affghaunistaun: Volume 1
In Secret Mongolia (Mystic Traveller)
Travels from St. Petersburg in Russia, to Diverse Parts of Asia: Volume 2
Journey to the North of India, overland from England, through Russia, Persia, and Affghaunistaun: Volume 2
Long Road Home: A China Journal (National Association of Baptist Professo)
Tino Turtle Travels to Beijing, China
Hong Kong: Front Door/Back Door
Beijing Then and Now (Then & Now Thunder Bay)
The Great Wall of China
Guide to Hiking China's Old Road to Shu

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Last updated: Sat Aug 30 01:42:22 EDT 2008