Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Peter Hessler, the inspiration of my memoirs - Zhang Lijia

Bestselling author Zhang Lijia recalls in her weblog how award winning journalist Peter Hessler inspired her to write her memoirs, "Socialism Is Great!": A Worker's Memoir of the New China. Hessler won the MacArthur Foundation award. Zhang Lijia
Among his three books, I’m particularly fond of River Town, for its simple and elegant prose, often with fresh twist: “Fuling is a city of legs – the gnarled caves of a stick-stick soldier, the bowed legs of an old man, the willow-thin ankles of a xiaojie…” I admire his sharp observation as an outsider. For example, he talks about how Chinese often laugh at a moment westerners would think impropriate, saying mentioning death, and points out it’s just a Chinese way to ease the awkwardness. I realized that’s what I’ve been doing without realizing why. And I love his subtle humour. And I think he put just right amount about himself in the book, which is about a Chinese town, seeing through his eyes. Through the pages, he comes across as an extremely nice man who honestly reveals his more arrogant (only by his own standard) English-speaking Peter Hessler and more likable Chinese-speaking He Wei (何伟,his Chinese name). I am delighted that his fame and enormous success have not blown up his ego. This spring during Beijing’s International Writer’s Festival, I saw him and his twin girls. He remains the same laid-back and amiable guy he always was and even the cute babies are easy-going.
More in Zhang Lijia's weblog   Zhang Lijia is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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Friday, September 16, 2011

Why the Chinese read fewer books - Zhang Lijia

Zhang Lijia
Drooling foreign publishers are trying to enter the Chinese market, like recently on the International Book Fair in Beijing. But author Zhang Lijia warns on her weblog for too high expectation, as the already limited number of books per Chinese is even dropping. Zhang Lijia:
 Eyeing at China’s massive potential, the publishers all asked me about the reading habit of the Chinese. I felt a little embarrassed to tell them that today’s Chinese don’t read much. And we are reading less and less, though more books than ever, domestically produced, imported and translated, are on offer. 
According to one survey, only 5% of the Chinese have the habit of reading. And on average, each Chinese reads 4.5 books a year comparing to 50 books for an American, 55 for a Russian and 65 for a Jew. Those being surveyed blame the lack of time for not reading while others admit that they don’t have the habit of reading. 
Of course, the digital world has taken away some readers. But that’s the challenge faced by the world. 
And if the Chinese read anything, it’ll be likely practical books that will help them to go far in life, books related to their account degree, MBA, or books such as how to become a millionaire, how to lose weight, how to deal with relationships or how to find a rich husband. If they read fiction, it’ll be likely cheap thrillers, tomb raiders, predictable romance, strange ghost stories or such. 
The Chinese seem to be too restless to read, to restless to read serious books.
More on Zhang Lijia's weblog

Zhang Lijia is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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Thursday, September 01, 2011

Dealing with identity - Zhang Lijia

lijia2Zhang LijiaThe famous author Zhang Lijia tells in her new weblog how she deals with questions about identity from her two daughters, while traveling in Bangladesh. "Well, if I tell people I am Chinese, people wouldn’t believe me."

Zhang Lijia:
True, May doesn’t look very Chinese, with her fair skin and brown air, especially the way she carries herself. My younger daughter Kirsty, who has darker complexion and more delicate facial features, looks a little more oriental. Yet they both identify themselves as British, culturally, even though they describe themselves as “half-Chinese and half-British”.
They go to British School in Beijing and almost all of their friends are English-speaking. It’s been a battle to inject the Chinese part of the culture into them. I speak Chinese to them and they often reply in English. For half of the time they stay with me (they spend another half with their father, my ex-husband) I try to ask them to write a few characters or I read them a story in Chinese. They see this as a task, a burden and a bargaining tool to get their pocket money instead of “an amazing opportunity that will open doors for them in the future”. They like Chinese food but prefer western food... 
What concerns me is the fact that my children seem to think the western culture is superior – though they may not make such statement. If they describe something, for example, someone’s outfit, hairstyle or manner, as ‘very Chinese’, it usually contains negative connotation.
More in Zhang Lijia's weblog

Zhang Lijia is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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"The epitome of the new China hand" - Paul French

Paul French
Paul French started off his latest book tour for "Midnight in Peking" in Australia with some raving reviews by local media. "He has discovered there is a growing audience who, like him, is fascinated by the world of the old China hands," writes the Australian. The Australian:
The book is set in the 1930s -- the victim is killed in 1937 -- and Chinese readers are intrigued that there were white Russians and Jews in Beijing in those days, French says. He encountered the story of the mysterious and shocking murder of Pamela Werner when reading old newspapers. But because it had not been solved he presumed the ending would have to remain open. However, French later had a "eureka moment" when, trawling through the British National Archives in Kew, he discovered an investigation, previously filed but lost in the chaos of World War II, that effectively solved the murder. French's stylish third-person narrative has also been something of a eureka moment. "Just a historian before", French is now being recast as a literary figure, and he's enjoying the resulting upmarket treatment.
More in The Australian Paul French is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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Thursday, May 19, 2011

Helen Wang speaks at Kepler's bookstore, May 26

Wang_Helen_HiRes_black_MG_1708
Celebrity author Helen Wang of The Chinese Dream: The Rise of the World's Largest Middle Class and What It Means to You will speak on May 26 at Kepler's bookstore, Menlo Park, California.

From the invite:
In The Chinese Dream, a groundbreaking book about the rising middle class in China, Forbes columnist, consultant, and China expert Helen Wang challenges us to recognize that some of our fears about China are grossly misplaced. As a result of China's new capitalist paradigm, a burgeoning middle class--calculated to reach 800 million within the next fifteen years--is jumping aboard the consumerism train and riding it for all it's worth--a reality that may provide the answer to America's economic woes. And with China's increasing urbanization and top-down governmental approach, it now faces increasing energy, environmental, and health problems--problems that the U.S. can help solve. Through timely interviews, personal stories, and a historical perspective, China-born Wang takes us into the world of the Chinese entrepreneurial middle class to show how a growing global mindset and the realization of unity in diversity may ultimately provide the way to creating a saner, safer world for all.
The event will take place between 19 and 21 hours at 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park, California 94025-4349.

Please RSVP here.
Helen Wang is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.



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Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The yin and yang of the Chinese Dream - Helen Wang

Wang_Helen_HiRes_black_MG_1708Helen Wang
A very positive review of The Chinese Dream: The Rise of the World's Largest Middle Class and What It Means to YouInternational Business & Investing Books)by Helen Wang in The Internet Review of Books, by Jack Shakely:
On a few occasions, Wang reminds us of the subtle nature of the Mandarin language. This is code to remind us that she, too, must be respectful and circumspect if she wants to continue doing business with the notoriously thin-skinned Chinese government. Almost every chapter ends on an up-beat look to the future, but if you peel back the optimism and bravado, you find a China with an inferiority complex, sure of the future, but conflicted about the present. Wang acknowledges that China's system of higher education is antiquated and ill-prepares young Chinese to take their place at the creative headwaters of the twenty-first century. One person laments that China can manufacture everything, but can't invent anything. Another claims that communism is a failed economic system, but that democracy is out of the question for decades, if ever.
The whole point of Wang's book--that a burgeoning middle class in China is inevitable is also classic yin and yang. No one can deny that the American dream of a car, a home, appliances and a good education for the children should not be withheld from middle class Chinese. Yet no one also can deny that adding 100 million more automobiles and tripling coal energy consumption will turn the Chinese Dream into an environmental global nightmare.


More in The Internet Review of Books.

Helen Wang is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. When you need her as a speaker at your meeting of conference, do get in touch


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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Where to make money in China? - Helen Wang

Wang_Helen_HiRes_black_MG_1708Helen Wang
Celebrity author Helen Wang taps into the excitement of Western companies to enter the China market. The paper JingDaily asks her wide ranging questions on her book on China's middle class, The Chinese Dream. Focus on health care and education, she advises foreign companies.
JD: Last year, we interviewed Handel Jones, author of ChinAmerica, who said that education, health and the Internet are going to be the most lucrative sectors for Western companies to tap the Chinese middle class. Would you agree with this? Are there any other sectors you would add?

HW: Definitely, the healthcare and education sectors will provide lucrative opportunities for Western companies. I am not sure about the Internet as it’s currently dominated by domestic companies. But if you look at the e-commerce sector, it could be a game changer. Recently, many VCs have invested in e-commerce and group buying sites as China’s internet users are approaching half a billion.

I think the consumer products sector, particularly in the areas of luxury goods and big ticket items such as automobiles, LCD TVs, and smartphones, will see increasing opportunities for Western companies. I would also add the clean tech sector. Western companies are leading in technology in this field.
More in JingDaily.


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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Baidu removes 2,8 million literary works - Kaiser Kuo

Kaiser HeadshotKaiser Kuo
In an effort to resolve a high-profile spat with Chinese authors on piracy, the country's leading search engine Baidu removed 2,8 million filles, told company spokesman Kaiser Kuo the BBC, hoping this action would create enough good faith.
More than 40 authors and publishers had accused Baidu that its literary platform, Baidu Wenku was greatly infringing on their copyrights by publishing without their permission. Negotiations about a deal fell flat last week.
The BBC:
"By Tuesday afternoon we had removed almost 2.8 million files, mainly from the Literary Works section of the site, which was the primary concern of the writers and publishers," Baidu spokesperson Kaiser Kuo told the BBC..

"Now that we've scrubbed the site, we hope our good faith action will be a good, solid foundation for future co-operation," Mr Kuo said.
"One thing that this whole episode has amply demonstrated is that Baidu Library is very powerful distribution platform that can be put to very good and profitable use by the authors and publishers in cooperation with Baidu, to the benefit of all parties, especially the readers," he added.
Kaiser Kuo is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. When you need him at your meeting or conference, do get in touch.
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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

All foreign books to be banned in China? - Bill Dodson

BD_Casual2v2revImage by Fantake via Flickr
Bill Dodson
Celebrity author Bill Dodson just discovered by accident that his succesful book China Inside Out has been taken off the shelves of a book store in Suzhou. It might be the start of more, he reports at his weblog. In the end all foreign books might be banned in China.
China Inside Out apparently caught the attention of the Fahrenheit 451 brigade in Suzhou. I’d gone down to the local branch of the Bookworm this past Sunday to kick-off a Royal Asiatic Society author’s talk on Edmund Backhouse’s Decadence Mandchoue, as bawdy an historical narrative as one will ever find. A friend at the shop told me my book had caused a bit of a stir a few days before with the local F451. I thought he was kidding.
The proprietor confirmed after the Decadence talk that, indeed, F451 had been to the shop, saw the nice little display for the book set up at the front bar; and politely asked that the book be removed. In all fairness, it’s not the first time the shop has been targeted. And it won’t be the last time, either. Apparently, F451 will shortly be requiring ALL books written by foreigners be taken down from the shelves.
Regime change has central and local authorities more brittle than at any time in twenty years.
The country just can’t seem to break out of some cycles.
Bill Dodson is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him (and his books) at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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Monday, March 07, 2011

Explaining China "inside out" - book review

BD_Casual2v2revBill Dodson
Explaining China to an outside audience will never be very easy, but most (book) authors fall at least in one of two major pitfalls.
First, their writings are often meant to outsmart their fellow China experts, not to inform people. While there is nothing wrong with trying to look better than your peers, it seldom is the best way to explain a complicated China to relative newcomers. Expert reviewers often complain they have found nothing new, unless a book challenges their world view. They just fail to understand, they might not be the target audience.
On the other extreme other authors simplify what is happening in China to such a degree, to accommodate their audiene, the country becomes a cartoon of itself.
In his book China Inside Out: 10 Irreversible Trends Reshaping China and its Relationship with the World, Bill Dodson gracefully avoids both dangers. His strong story telling skills makes his explanations both entertaining and convincing. This is a must-read book all China experts should advise to their newbie friends.

Bill Dodson is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. When you need him at your meeting or conference, do get in touch.





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Thursday, August 12, 2010

Fat China, blame on the advertisement industry - Paul French

paulfrenchPaul French
Obesity is rising in China and our speaker Paul French and co-author Matthew Crabbe wrote their new book Fat China: How Expanding Waistlines are Changing a Nation about the feature. In 1982 7 percent of the Chinese were overweight, in 2002 23 percent of urban China, 7 percent obese. In this article in AdAge they blame the advertisement industry.
From AdChina:
Today, 100 to 120 million Chinese are obese and about half of them are kids. The effects of this obesity crisis in China will be legion, including significantly increased levels of disease, including diabetes. China's healthcare system faces a time bomb of 100 million adults with diabetes within a couple of years. The additional costs will be massive.
Culture and wealth play a role in getting China fatter, but French also points his finger ad the advertising industry:
While we can't blame the advertising industry for urban China's appalling driving standards, the relationship between advertising and obesity is a long and documented one internationally, though to date, the discussion of the link between the advertising of fat-inducing foods and drinks and obesity has been muted in China.
This lack of discussion has not been due to any particular government clampdown or censorship, but rather to the rapid growth in advertising and fast-changing lifestyles that have meant that no time has yet been found for such discussions. Yet they will have to happen soon.
More challenging debate at AdAge.


Commercial
Paul French is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. When you need him at your meeting or conference, do get in touch.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Most-sought speakers for July 2010

warrenliurevWarren Liu     via Flickr
Major changes this month in our line-up for the top-10 most-sought speakers in July 2010, actually half of them is new. Highest newcomer of this month is Warren Liu, author of the best-selling book "KFC in China: Secret Recipe for Success (Paperback)", We only expected him to rise in our rankings by August or September, since we are almost done in releasing his new book, as a part of our publishing service. But you do not hear us complain, when the interest in our of our celebrity speakers goes up.
Warren Liu's next book, "China Key Success Factors. Past and Future rules for succeeding in China" (ISBN 978-0-615-37306-5) analyses eight key industries and their strategy of entering China. Its World Expo Edition will be available in August, and of course we will announce the book here too.
Two other relative newcomers deserve attention here. With the World Cup 2010 in South Africa behind our belts, it is no wonder Rowan Simons, our own soccer specialist, rose in the ranks. Many mainstream media found him to explain, why China has not been making it to the world cup.
Back from a long-term absence is also Paul Denlinger, who has not been really away, but until a few months ago been working outside the publicity he was used to. Now Paul Denlinger is back, and how.
Kaiser Kuo is back on the top-position, and not surprisingly, since he landed earlier this month into an interesting job at Google's major competitor in China, Baidu.com, where he is now director international communication. Fortunately, he is also available for speeches.
Now, without further delay, the top-10 most-sought speakers list for July 2010 (June 2010 in brackets).
  1. Kaiser Kuo (6)
  2. Warren Liu (-)
  3. Shaun Rein (-)
  4. Arthur Kroeber (5)
  5. Paul French (7)
  6. Victor Shih (-)
  7. Rowan Simons (-)
  8. Rupert Hoogewerf or Hurun (3)
  9. Paul Denlinger (-)
  10. Tom Doctoroff (-)


Sunday, July 11, 2010

September book tour in Brazil - Zhang Lijia

ZhanglijiaImage by Fantake via Flickr
Our celebrity speaker Zhang Lijia is preparing for her next book tour, this time for her Portuguese translation of "Socialism Is Great!": A Worker's Memoir of the New China". She will be in Brazil from August 29 till September 16, starting off in Rio de Janeiro and the last few days in Sao Paolo.
For a Brazilian audience that would be an unique chance to share Zhang Lijia's profound insights in the Chinese society, and not many of our speakers make it to South America. When you are interested in having her as a speaker, do get in touch. 


Saturday, September 15, 2007

A not-so harmonious society - a book plan


When I finished some years ago my book on "The wild East. 15 misunderstandings on China and the Chinese" (only in Dutch and German, you see here the German cover) I vowed I would never write a book again. Not only did I find writing a book a gruesome lonely boring process that did not fit my character, it seemingly offered little advantages. Unless you have a Harry Potter it is certainly not a way to make a living and getting that little bit of money actually paid by European publishers is tougher than getting money out of a Chinese company.
The number of people that actually buy your book is, compared to the impact of activities like this weblog, very low.
What is nice is that in a book you can actually build up an argument, make a point, often better than in short internet entries. And there is of course the vanity factor: publishers know that people love to have a book on their name, even if it does not pay the bills. Some publishing houses actually let authors paid to make maximum use of this vanity factor.
Of course, vanity is no issue for me :-). But this week I had two conversations with publishers who gently pushed me to give the idea of a book a thought. And then without wanting it, the thought-process was triggered off.
Now, by accident I have also been writing a proposal to write a client report for an HR-company on labor issues and these two lines came together this week. The famous labor contract law and the trade union activities at Wal-Mart are both part of Hu Jintao's "Harmonious Society" and so I thought, tying up other elements of Hu's drive for this harmonious society might actually be a good concept for a book. When this client-report works out, I might already have a nice basis.
What is helping too is my current work at Chinabiz Speakers. Maybe few authors can make a living by writing books, but when you can be linked up with a professional speaking circuit, that does make a difference. Selling speakers who have some books on their name proves also to be easier.
Let's ponder a bit.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Books on China not to buy

Are you looking for something to read in the upcoming May holidays? Access Asia breaks with a tradition in reviewing books and lists in this week's newsletter three that are actually so bad, you should not buy them. So in AA's great tradition of not being afraid to piss people off, you should not buy:
By Will Hutton: The Writing on the Wall: Why We Must Embrace China as a Partner or Face It as an Enemy.
The Windbag of the Third Way displays a profound and deep lack of knowledge of (or even passing acquaintance with) China, but still manages to stuff his bank account with royalties anyway.
By Sid Smith:China Dreams.
We can only assume that Sid Smith is a fake name for a teenager somewhere in Wimbledon who’s turning in these manuscripts to his uncle’s publishing company. Nothing to do with China, or anything much else for that matter, except some lunatic dreams that make no sense whatsoever – the only good news is that it’s less than 200 pages long.
By Guy Delisle: Shenzhen: A Travelogue From China.
Another in the “oh I’m a foreigner and China’s really weird” school of books. For 150 pages! As bad as a language student’s blog (and they are all really bad) covering strange food, funny accents, they’re not really like us at all, and on and on and on.
More at the Access Asia Website.
The reviews all bear the hallmarks of our celebrity speaker Paul French, who is working through our Speakers Bureau. Are you interested to hear his critical view directly, do not hesitate to drop me a line.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Many more books on China ahead

Business is beating politics in the book sales on China, writes Paul French in the Weekly Update of Access Asia. Surprising winner, at least for me, is China CEO: Voices of Experience from 20 International Business Leaders that has sold in the tens of thousands (well, at least a couple of them).
But there is more ahead:

The China books bubble continues to swell, and that’s OK with us – it’s our kind of bubble. A good friend in Beijing has established an exclusive club only for people who have not yet written a book on China – it’s a club with a declining membership week by week, and soon the founder could be the only member (which is OK as he usually ends up drinking on his own anyway).
Paul French advises from the academic contributions a few of them, including Chris Alden's China in Africa: Partner, Competitor or Hegemon?
More books at Access Asia.