
Product description Book by From Publishers Weekly In 1984, 25-year-old David Kellogg took a break from studying Arabic in the Middle East to fulfill his childhood dream of traveling to China. The visitor became a resident, staying through the 1989 Tiananmen Square uprising, when he was accused of fomenting pro-democratic ideas. Five years' worth of letters written to family and friends, collected here, combine sketches of daily life with a wisecracking, diverting travelogue. Most rewarding are his sharply detailed observations--of the seedy bustle of Hong Kong; the preparation of a meal of dog meat (of which Kellogg became quite fond); the fantastic religious murals of Tibet; and the vagaries of his students in the science institute where he taught English. He also records his encounters with China's legendary lethargic bureaucracy and criticizes the abuses that attend China's forays into free enterprise. Three chapters written by Chinese authors include an original, contemporary folktale that sparked controversy and a lawsuit. A Westerner's-eye view of a China emerging from Maoism, Kellogg's book offers substance and information served up with literate panache. Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal In 1984, Kellogg went to China for a short visit to realize his boyhood dream and then stayed six years until the Tiananmen events forced him out. During those years he supported himself by teaching English, and during breaks he toured the country by buses, hitchhiking, and biking. Most of this book consists of letters he wrote to his family, and they reveal an independent-minded and often flippant personality. Passages by friends Liu and Tang are also included. Comparable in tone to Stuart Stevens's Night Train to Turkistan ( LJ 6/1/88), only incidentally is this a book about China; its dominant theme is Kellogg in search of himself. For larger travel collections.<br
Page Count:
422
Publication Date:
1989-01-01
ISBN-10:
0948096217
ISBN-13:
9780948096211
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