名人推薦:
“Opium-addict, concubine, missionary, spy — Paul French brings to life the larger-than-life personalities of a bygone China foreign press corps. Reading Through the Looking Glass makes me wish I'd become an old China hand a century earlier.” — Melinda Liu, who first began reporting on China 25 years ago. Liu is Newsweek’s Beijing Bureau Chief and former president of the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China. “Through the Looking Glass is wonderful and layered. On one level, it is a delightful insight into the antics of the foreign press corps in an exotic land — a bit like Scoop, but true. On another, it is a historical treasure trove; we learn how Hemingway and Marx saw China, and we revel in the story of Queen Victoria's Pekinese dog, “Lootie”. Lastly, it holds a “looking glass” up to the imperfections of perspective that is as relevant now as ever.” — James Kynge, former Financial Times Beijing Bureau Chief and author of China Shakes the World “Enthralling. With a fascinating cast of characters and a dramatic narrative of events, this book provides a new window on to this tumultuous period of Chinese history as well as showing how journalism really works on the ground, for good or ill.” — Jonathan Fenby, author of the Penguin History of Modern China and China Director at Trusted Sources Research “Paul French’s latest publication is a fascinating hybrid of a book. It's part wonderfully useful reference tool (detailing who covered China when for which newspaper), part irreverent and gossipy behind the scenes look at journalism during an eventful period of Chinese history (filled with cheeky asides about famous, infamous, and once-famous but now forgotten writers), and part thoughtful meditation on the curious hold that the world’s most populous country has long had on the Western imagination. Though focusing on the past, it has much to offer anyone interested in the twists and turns of contemporary Western media coverage of the PRC. As French notes, after all, this is not the first time that people around the world have become fascinated by and concerned about Chinese developments — nor even the first when celebrity writers (Hemingway and Isherwood during World War II, Thomas Friedman and Dave Barry during the Beijing Games) have found it alluring to spend a stint working the China beat.” — Jeffrey Wasserstrom, Professor of History at University of California at Irvine, co-founder of “The China Beat” blog, and author, most recently, of Global Shanghai, 1850–2010.