books:
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River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze (P.S.)
Peter Hessler
Harper Perennial
, 2006 - 432 pages
average customer review:
based on 161 reviews
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highly recommended
River Town
Excellent and intertaining story of
town
in the way of being inundated by water behind the Three Gorges Dam. And, the experience of an American who volunteered to teach Chinese in a small college for teachers and their lives after graduation.
insigtful
If you want to get an understanding of what life in China is like this is the perfect book. A very detailed book nicely written Would have given 5 stars if there had been pictures!
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captivating book about Chinese life
As a college student currently studying Chinese culture and Mandarin Chinese, I found this book extremely interesting and well-written. It wasn't dry like many books I've attempted to read about China. Hessler writes very well: he does a good job engaging the reader and bringing emotion into his story. I have visited China once before, and I thought that Peter Hessler's view and description of it was very accurate. He admits his own biases, and really tries to see China and its culture from a fair point of view.
I am attempting to read another book by a different author about life in China as a "waiguoren," and, though interesting, it is not nearly as well-written. I am looking foward to reading Hessler's next book, Oracle Bones.
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Yangtze River Town Comes Alive
Whether you are an arm chair traveler, or you are actually planning a
Yangtze
River cruise
, you will want to read this book. Peter Hessler makes sights and sounds and people come alive in his book about his
two year
Peace Corps assignment as an English teacher in the Yangtze River
town
of Fuling. On a recent cruise on the Yangtze River, we, who had read the book, gathered excitedly at the bow of the ship to catch a glimpse of the city we felt we had come to know. The river has begun rising in The Three Gorges since Hessler was there in the mid nineties. New buildings on higher ground have replaced old buildings. But because Hessler vividly communicates the intimate feeling of the back streets, stick soldiers, and noodle cafes, we realize that fundamentally little has changed.
Hessler is exceptionally good at reflecting on his social faux pas, his feelings of being different (in this backward area, they had barely seen a Caucasian before) and his efforts to teach English and learn Chinese in a politically and socially complex environment. We glean a richness and texture of life in China from his insights.
Enjoy this memoir as it mirrors to us a changing China.
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A fascinating, insightful account of a Westerner living in Sichuan in the 1990s
I first stumbled across Peter Hessler's
River
Town about
a year ago. At the time, a busy schedule prevented me from reading more than the first chapter or so. But I resolved to get through the book once I had the chance. Fortunately, this is one resolution I managed to keep. I enjoyed River Town and believe it achieves exactly what it aspires to do: record the life of an outsider living in a specific place in China during a specific, albeit brief, period of time.
More precisely, River Town is a
two year
record of the (often humorous) experiences and the insight of a Peace Corps volunteer in Sichuan province, central China from 1996-1998. It alternates between subjective chapters about Hessler and his experiences as one of the first foreigners to live in Fuling, a city on the
Yangtze River
, and self-contained, descriptive chapters about the Sichuan province and its people (including peasant farmers living outside Fuling, the city's Catholic priest, and detailed description of prominent natural landmarks). This format works well in defining time and place, but the chapters about Hessler's personal experiences are more interesting and form a majority of the book.
His narrative proceeds chronologically, beginning with the culture shock he experiences teaching ever-obedient students shaped by
years
of communist propaganda and "political meetings," to being mobbed by curious onlookers who have never seen Westerner in person, to dealing with chronic pollution-induced sickness, to embarking on his study of the Mandarin and Sichuanese dialects. Once he learns how to adapt to these obstacles and becomes proficient with the language, Hessler carves out a fascinating existence in Fuling. He befriends unlikely locals and begins to ponder his dual personalities: that of Peter Hessler, the Ivy-educated Westerner, and that of "Ho Wei" (Hessler's Sichuanese name), an often unaware outsider that has trouble speaking Chinese and earns a low salary. The opportunity to stride around Fuling as the clueless Ho Wei is one Hessler clearly relishes.
Occasionally I felt Hessler was being somewhat aloof in his descriptions of certain individuals and even Chinese/Sichuan mannerisms in general. And occasionally I felt like the things he said, while likely true, were extremely blunt and could have been written more sensitively (such as anecdotes about less studious or unpopular students). Then I realized almost no one he describes in the book will ever read it. Hessler is free to write candidly about first impressions, describe one of his students as a "loser," and generally comment on his life in Fuling without censoring his thoughts. This contributes enormously to the honesty of the book.
As I read the final pages of River Town, I realized just how engrossing Hessler's story had become. He describes his departure from Fuling after two years of nearly uninterrupted residency, and I realized he was leaving a life and friends he valued immensely. I have heard often readjustment after the Peace Corps is always more difficult than acclimation at the beginning of service. Now I feel I can better understand why. I couldn't help but feel a poignant sense of loss as the existence of Ho Wei drifted away from Fuling on the same boat as Hessler. In two short years he had lived a lifetime.
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