At the request of Marya_, I am officially opening a new thread on Asia books:
This is but one of many good ones I've read in the past year; I will add the other when I remember them!
http://www.amazon.com/Travels-Siberia-Ian-Frazier/dp/0374278725
TIME FOR ANOTHER ASIA BOOK LIST
Recent Activity
View all Asia activity »
- 1 Photography Trip to Vietnam
- 2 Kanchanaburi - Toi's Tours
- 3 where to go in SE Asia
- 4
Uzbekistan: A Lesson in Silk Road Hospitality
- 5
Beijing To Tibet, Mt. Everest And Nepal All In 10 Days
- 6 Siem Reap from San Fran in winter 2013 FIRST TIME to Asia
- 7 Suggestions for Asian visit Feb. 2014, incl. Singapore
- 8
trip report to tajmahal agra india
- 9 Hilton coming in Zhengzhou, China?
- 10 Nepal, Tibet, and Bhutan tour suggestions
- 11 Dreamliner to Japan in Nov.?
- 12
4 days with Orangutans Balikpapan + Camp Leakey
- 13
Cambodia, Laos and a bit of Hong Kong - 5 1/2 weeks (Jan.24-March 4, 2013)
- 14 Trip plans to SE Asia for 2014 coming together! Int'l flights purchased!
- 15 Sri Lanka
- 16 Suggestion for Bali
- 17 Elephant Visit in Chiang Mai
- 18 Proposed Sri Lanka Itinerary - any opinions welcome
- 19 Rajasthan tour: Car and Driver services, advise needed
- 20 which hotel in Bangkok in July?
- 21 Family Japan Trip in August for First Time - Hotel Planning Advice
- 22
Hello, Vietnam
- 23 Is it worth switching hotels in Tokyo?
- 24 11 days in Japan, JR pass question
- 25 Kashmir or Nepal



The last days of old Beijing, by Meyer is a recent, nicely written and most informative book.
Brava!
Just when I am off to the library to pick up my reserved copy of a book that Craig recommended -- RADIO SHANGRI-LA by Lisa Napoli -- I find this delightful thread. Please keep the recommendations coming.
Here is a suggestion. If anyone saw or is planning to see the exhibit at the Met (or Boston or Milwaukee),"The Emperor's Private Paradise: Treasures from the Forbidden City," I highly recommend a very short, readable biography of Qianlong by Mark C. Elliott -- EMPEROR QIANLONG: SON OF HEAVEN, MAN OF THE WORLD.
http://tinyurl.com/62mtzvx
Merckxxx, I strongly agree with your recommendation of THE LAST DAYS OF OLD BEIJING. Here is a link to entice folks further:
http://www.lastdaysofoldbeijing.com/
Looking forward to more.
Not just Asia, but a book I'm reading now and very much enjoying is Tony Wheeler's book BAD LANDS
http://www.amazon.com/Lonely-Planet-Wheelers-Badlands-Literature/dp/1742201040
Did anyone ever read Tony and Maureen Wheeler's account of how they started the business -- UNLIKELY DESTINATIONS: THE LONELY PLANET STORY? It is good fun for die-hard travel planners.
http://www.amazon.com/Unlikely-Destinations-Lonely-Planet-Story/dp/0794605230
I just finished Bad Lands, and in fact, mentioned it on another current thread, but I did not know about that one, so thanks Marya_, for the mention..I will investigate!
http://www.fodors.com/community/asia/a-glimpse-inside-pyongyang.cfm
I am reading To Japan With Love, "a travel guide for the connoisseur". It has several short pieces (personal essays), like travel reports here, by a variety of authors and in different categories, like cultural encounters, spiritual Japan, young at heart, etc. They are written for the most part (maybe all) by foreigners who have lived in Japan. Many of the writers are women.
Each article is followed by info (fact file) about the place/experience discussed, especially "getting to" info (which can pretty specific).
There are also movie and book recommendations.
This is one of a series of guidebooks for Asia, see:
http://toasiawithlove.thingsasian.com/
Speaking about movies, I just watched a film that I thought was a masterwork:
http://www.last-train.com/
I just finished a 2010 translation of Lao She's, Rickshaw Boy. What a book. He read and admired Dickens and I do not mean at all to compare talents or style, but the issues of workers and poor people in developing nations is dramatic and compelling. Now after all these years, it does stimulate a great deal of thought on how England and China - more specifically London and Beijing - dealt with that legacy.
But without any other reasons, it is a novel you must read.
I would love some recommendations for titles set in Indonesia. Anyone?
I have read the first book in Toer's BURU QUARTET and have three to go but I would like to vary things a bit.
I just found Tash Aw's MAP OF THE INVISIBLE WORLD in the library. Has anyone read it?
On marmot's recommendation, I watched the film, THE YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY, again and found it much more compelling after a visit to Jakarta. Perhaps it is also worth reading the book.
Thanks for any other ideas.
If you are interested in autobiographies I heartily recommend The Little Princes by Conor Grennan.
http://www.harpercollins.com/books/Little-Princes-Conor-Grennan/
It's about a young man in his 20's who decides to volunteer for 3 months in an orphanage in Nepal. He fell in love with the kids and went back to stay for a year. He found out the kids were not orphans but had been victims of a man who conviced their parents in rural north west Nepal to give up their kids for a better life. He took the parents money and sold the kids to Maoist soldiers, and worse. Many of the kids ended up in his orphanage and he spent (and is still doing so) years finding and reuniting the kids with their parents.
I just finished "The Man Who Loved China", by Simon Winchester and couldn't put it down.
Now reading the Lisa Napoli book about her time at a radio station in Bhutan. Easy read. Sense of humor. Recommended.
http://www.amazon.com/Radio-Shangri-Learned-Happiest-Kingdom/dp/0307453022/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1300793069&sr=1-1
Reading "To A Mountain in Tibet" by Colin Thubron, about the author's overland trek to Mt Kailas, sacred, as he puts it, to "one fifth of the world's population." Vivid and graceful writing, tales from local mythology and religion, some harrowing details on local life -- the sky burial description will stay with you -- and an open eye towards history and current politics.
http://www.amazon.com/Mountain-Tibet-Colin-Thubron/dp/006176826X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1300809134&sr=1-1
If radio programs count, some might enjoy a BBC series called "In Our
Time". The format is three academics discussing a topic, chaired by
by Melvyn Bragg (well-known in the UK). Here are links to some
recent items of Asia interest. Click on any of these to get to the
full archive.
Taiping Rebellion: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00yqvqt
Boxer Rebellion: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00j4hmv
Daoism: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00wlgbg
Al-Biruni: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00smnlk
Great Wall: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00s3h3w
Samurai: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00pcm9f
Silk Road: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00p315t
Jaipur Observatory: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00hmpdd
Genghis Khan: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00773mr
More lightweight is a travel program called "Excess Baggage".
Here's its archive:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/excessbaggage/excessbaggage_archive.shtml
someotherguy, I am listening to the one on Daoism, I suspect I am a Daoist in my last life, I really like the idea of 'doing nothing is the highest Dao'. The theory suits me. Thanks
I highly recommend the original book version of The Year of Living Dangerously. I think it was a very good movie, but the book has more depth.
Not fiction, but a fascinating history set in the Spice Islands, Nathaniel's Nutmeg.
Because my son will be spending the summer in Mumbai I decided to dust off my India collection and have I recently reread:
A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush -- one of the classics of travel literature. Most entertaining.
Kim -- One of the first and most charming players in the Great Game.
A Jewel in the Crown -- intense and provocative, but I never feel motivated to continue on to the other 3 parts.
The White Tiger -- contemporary, urban and timely
A Passage to India -- my all time favorite. I must read it every year.
The Seige of Krishnapur -- I'll have to report back in a few days on this one.
For book sets in Indonesia, DL has these on his bookshelf: House of Glass, and The Mute's Soliloquy by Pramoedya Ananta Toer( he won a very prestigious prize for his writing and he also was a candidate for a nobel prize) , Max Haveliaar (or the coffee auctions of the Dutch Trading Company) by Muliatuli.
>>Speaking about movies, I just watched a film that I thought was a masterwork:
http://www.last-train.com/<<
Watched it last night after finding it here and it is amazing, just really hard to believe.
The last train was good i think so too. I thought it was amazing that the family allow a camera into their difficult lives. The ending was unsettling for me. Wonder what happened to the girl.
Not to hijack this thread, but I wondered the same thing so i googled it. An interview with the director last summer 8/10:
RF: And did the daugther, Qin, watch the film?
LF: Qin didn’t watch the film.
RF: How is she doing now?
LF: I met her last month. She left her job in Shenzhen after we finishing filming. She went to another province, Hubai province. She stayed in a smaller city to work in a hotel. But now she quit her job. She seems pretty happy now living independently in the city. She told me she has a boyfriend now. Although she has very little education. That’s worrisome. But I think she’s a smart girl, she knows how to make her way.
RF: How old is she now?
LF: She’s 20. Big girl.
RF: Is she talking to her parents?
LF: She told me that she called during the spring festival. Other than that, they don’t talk. She did [go] back to see her brother.
LF: How is he doing?
RF: The brother got into a really good high school this past summer. He got into the best high school in his town. The mother quit her job to go back and take care of him.
The rest is really interesting to read:
http://rooftopfilms.com/blog/2010/08/filmmaker-interview-last-train-homes-lixin-fan.html
Thanks amyb.
Echoing the thanks to Amy for posting the update. I am so glad a few of you watched that film. Incredible!
Anyone read this?
http://www.amazon.com/Red-China-Blues-Long-March/dp/0385482329/ref=pd_sim_b_14
Bookmarking and adding some old classics that I have thoroughly enjoyed:
"Freedom at Midnight" by Collins and Lapierre
http://www.amazon.com/Freedom-at-Midnight-Dominique-Lapierre/dp/8125931643/
"The Soong Dynasty" by Sterling Seagrave
http://www.amazon.com/Soong-Dynasty-Sterling-Seagrave/dp/0060913185/
"Stilwell and The American Experience in China" by Barabar Tuchman
http://www.amazon.com/Stilwell-American-Experience-China-1911-45/dp/0802138527/
In the latter is the classic story which I'll briefly relate to the best of my fading memory. An American officer, who speaks fluent Chinese (Mandarin or dialect, don't remember) gets out of his car and approaches two peasant farmers. He asks "Is this the road to Chengdu?". They stare at him blankly. He repeats the question, slowly. Blank stares. He shrugs his shoulders and starts walking away. One of the farmers turns to the other and says "It sounded like that foreigner was asking if this was the road to Chengdu!"
Tuchman's telling would of course be much better.
I greatly appreciate this thread as I plan my first foray to Asia (China in September). I feel like a stranger in a strange land not being on the Europe forum! I'm having a harder time finding literature in particular that has been translated to English, unlike my reading list for Russia last year.
Apologies if these duplicate previous recommendations; this is my "to be read" list so far:
The Man Who Loved China - Winchester
http://www.amazon.com/Man-Who-Loved-China-Fantastic/dp/B003A02R9O/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=I14KCJ9D1J9SXP&colid=37VHARJL34PR6
A Comrade Lost and Found - Wong
http://www.amazon.com/Comrade-Lost-Found-Beijing-Memoir/dp/0547247893/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=I2MARMAQGT789U&colid=37VHARJL34PR6
Postcards from Tomorrow Square - Fallows
http://www.amazon.com/Postcards-Tomorrow-Square-Reports-Vintage/dp/0307456242/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=I36G18Y4SJY15I&colid=37VHARJL34PR6
China Witness Voices from a Silent Generation - Xinran
http://www.amazon.com/China-Witness-Voices-Silent-Generation/dp/0701180404/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=I6FCO7B6JRNPM&colid=37VHARJL34PR6
Factory Girls From Village to City in a Changing China - Chang
http://www.amazon.com/Factory-Girls-Village-Changing-China/dp/0385520182/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=IN8MU5XAE8N18&colid=37VHARJL34PR6
Last Days of Old Beijing - Meyer
http://www.amazon.com/Last-Days-Old-Beijing-Backstreets/dp/0802717500/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=I2T2HR6RS77BAP&colid=37VHARJL34PR6
China: It's History and Culture - Morton
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0071412794
China Road - A Journey into the Future of a Rising Superpower
http://www.amazon.com/China-Road-Journey-Future-Rising/dp/0812975243/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1301407347&sr=1-1
If there's anything glaring that I must read, please, feel free to offer up suggestions.
In addition to watching Last Train Home this weekend, I also watched The Road Home, which I thought was just a beautiful, simple story. But I'm a sucker like that...
Linking these older threads with the current one:
http://www.fodors.com/community/asia/new-asia-book-highly-recommended.cfm
http://www.fodors.com/community/asia/your-favorite-books-related-to-travel-to-asia.cfm
Just a word of appreciation for this thread. I am currently reading RADIO SHANGRI-LA (Craig's recommendation), with Kathie's recommended BADLANDS moved to the top of the pile, and I am planning to see eks-recommended THE LAST TRAIN HOME as soon as possible. Please keep the titles coming.
And thank you for the links to earlier reading threads. I greatly appreciate it!
Once having arrived in Vietnam early in March with a new Kindle, I went in search of novels for purchase. Surprisingly, the New York Times list of "100 Notable Books" for 2010 includes three works of fiction about Vietnam, each one about the war. Because of the strong impression made by the War Remnants Museum in Saigon, I bought and read all three during our 27 days in Vietnam. I should say that I haven't been a fan of movies of the Vietnam War, having seen only a few of the many available, but after the museum visit I wanted to read some novels about it.
THE LOTUS EATERS by Tatjana Soli features the experiences of a young woman photojournalist named Helen. I selected it first because of the strong impact of the photos at the museum. Inherently interesting, and showing the pull Vietnam exerts on the main characters, this one has many virtues but with some of the flaws of a first novel. The author tries to do too much, for one thing. Helen's affairs, first with a seasoned photojournalist who acts as a mentor, and then with a Vietnamese man (Linh), sets up some of the alternatives she struggles with.
THE GIRL BY THE ROAD AT NIGHT by David Rabe is more compact and more focused. And Rabe is an a expert in Vietnamese literature and mythology and drama. His experience as a writer makes this the most beautifully written of the three. The subject here is the relationship of an American GI with a Vietnamese prostitute. Their relationship develops into something personal, though fraught with tragic cross-cultural misunderstandings--a theme that links it with THE LOTUS EATERS.
MATTERHORN is a mammoth, sprawling epic decades in the making. It describes a few months in the life of a member of the US infantry with all of the challenges, hardships, reversals, brutality, and growth attending war in the jungle. The stupidity of commanding officers, the racial tensions between GIs, the increasing alienation from a previous life--the incommensurability of being in combat in that war with anything "normal" comes through. Interestingly, in Hue I met in a restaurant one night a former military man who had been an American advisor in Vietnam as long ago as 1963. He has since made 30 trips back, bringing vets with him, and now volunteering to assist teachers on English in Vietnam schools. When I mentioned, with a bit of uncertainty, having just finished reading MATTERHORN (he had lived those experiences himself, after all), he responded appreciatively. He was as gripped by it as I was and said it was all accurate. That endorsement gave me confidence in my own reaction to the book. This novel is graphic but hard to put down. The writing is flawed at points, but that's easily overlooked. MATTERHORN is the equivalent of a page-turner in Kindle-ese.
There it is, as the GIs in MATTERHORN say. Three novels with a similar subject but each different from the others and each very much worth reading.
Another word of appreciation for the film recommended above, THE LAST TRAIN HOME, which shows the fractured families and fractured dreams that the great migration to China's southern factories has created.
This technique of showing the dramatic impact of larger social movements on individuals and their families -- particularly those who are less powerful, less well represented, less inclined to have a voice -- is deeply moving.
This film reminded me so very much of UP THE YANGTZE, directed by Yung Chang, and now I learn from the interview link thoughtfully posted by amyb above that director Fan Lixin actually served as an associate producer/sound recorder/translator on that earlier film.
If you liked THE LAST TRAIN HOME and you haven't yet seen UP THE YANGTZE, please do.
Just noticed that I neglected to give the author of MATTERHORN in my post just above. It's Karl Marlantes, a veteran of marine combat.
New novel on Vietnam with a brief review in today's NYTimes:
http://arts.nationalpost.com/2010/08/21/book-review-the-beauty-of-humanity-movement-by-camilla-gibb/
A Toronto woman we met at a hotel restaurant in Hoi An had just read, and was raving about, THE BEAUTY OF HUMANITY MOVEMENT. Thanks for this review.
Thanks to this thread, I too just watched Last Train Home ( it's on instant play on netflix). Interesting and moving.
Fellow Readers with Travel Obsessions:
I enjoyed reading RADIO SHANGRI-LA but more for the opportunity to get to know author Lisa Napoli than for the chance to discover much about Bhutan. I respect her intrepid seeking spirit, but I wish that she had both mulled her experiences over longer and spent more time working with an editor.
For me, the book succeeds as a cross between a spiritual autobiography and a valentine to her adopted second country. It just doesn't give quite as much vicarious experience of Bhutan as this reader would have liked. It is a great promotion for the concept of Gross National Happiness though.
Anyone?
Also on the subject of vicarious travel to less probable destinations, I am glad to have read TONY WHEELER'S BAD LANDS: A TOURIST ON THE AXIS OF EVIL although I don't think that it rises to the level of 'drop what you are doing and read it now.'
The premise of the book is highly engaging and I mostly get a kick out of Wheeler's sense of humor, but don't expect this thin quilt of cultural lore and personal musings to stimulate deep thought. You learn a little bit about each of the countries showcased -- Afghanistan, Albania, Burma, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea & Saudi Arabia -- but traveling with Wheeler at that pace leads to an inevitable "If it's Tuesday, this must be Belgium" level of insight."
Yes, yes, I know that the point is to quash the idea of an axis of evil and champion a more nuanced notion of good and evil at home and abroad. To that a resounding "Bravo"! Wheeler's "Evil Meter TM" analysis and "Other Bad Lands -- the Extended List" do show evidence of an admirable willingness to embrace complexity. They just don't break any new ground.
Anyone looking for more romps through rogue (and otherwise less accessible) countries might also enjoy Elinor Burkett's SO MANY ENEMIES, SO LITTLE TIME: AN AMERICAN WOMAN IN ALL THE WRONG PLACES.
History buffs can rummage through piles of books about the US experience in Vietnam. For balance, Valley of Death, newly released in hard cover, examines the battles that kicked the French out of the country in the 1950s. It's by Ted Morgan, a Pulitzer-prizewinner.
North Americans know little about the Second World War in Asia other than the American campaigns against Japan.Two books by British authors detail (and how) the horrors of that war in the British colonies: Burma, Malaya, Singapore, the eastern side of India, Hong Kong in passing and the postwar attempt to return Indonesia to Dutch rule. The scope of the bloodshed is appalling and overlooked. Christopher Bayly and Tim Harper called their books Forgotten Armies (the Japanese campaigns) and Forgotten Wars (the aftermath for the British Empire.) They're both in paperback, and both are long and complicated -- but today those lands are still complicated and of increasing importance.
I just read a really entertaining novel set in Vietnam, called 'Hanoi Jane' by Elka Ray - it's chick lit, so is light reading, but was entertaining and full of fun details about Vietnam. I've also been following the author's blog at elkaray.com. I lived in Hanoi for two years and this book reminded me of that amazing experience.
Well, I have to disagree with the esteemed ekscunchy. I am in the middle of Ian Frazier's book right now, and rather wish I hadn't bother to start it. Aside from a few days on the largely barren tip of Russia on the Bering Strait, it took 170 pages for him to get started on actually visiting Siberia. Most of that was flatly recounted history, most of which I already knew. Now he is finally traveling, he doesn't seem to be seeing much more than I did on the train.
He also seem to be lacking curiosity. Encountering just one Englishman in his trip across Siberia, he writes down his name and never checks to find out that he's a guidebook writer - in fact I have the first edition of Lonely Planet's Trans-Siberian, which he co-authored, on my shelves.
I think I'd be better off forgetting the remaining 200 pages and looking for Thubron's "In Siberia" instead.
ttt
Thursday: Sorry for the not-so-estimable recommendation!
Here is one that I read years ago and remember liking well enough; if you have time, perhaps give it a go and see what you think. Tayler has written a few other travel books; I seem to remember that he lives, or has lived, in Russia. He is no Colin Thurbron, though.
http://www.amazon.com/Siberian-Dawn-Journey-Across-Russia/dp/1886913269/ref=sr_1_11?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1306964871&sr=1-11
I read this one, too; might be worth taking a look but I will not put either in the "essential' category:
http://www.amazon.com/Murderers-Mausoleums-Riding-Between-Beijing/dp/0618799915/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1306965053&sr=1-1
Thanks eks. Murderers in Mausoleums looks like it should be fun. Of course, what I should be doing is rereading "Balkan Ghosts" and "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon" for my next trip...
So, if we are looking for masterful writing on Asian subjects, Colin Thubron may be a fine place to turn next? I have SHADOW OF THE SILK ROAD sitting on my pile. Is there a more beloved Thubron choice?
marya - I'd say "Heart of Asia" - but I just checked his bibliography, and discovered he started writing back in the 1960s! If you're reading Silk Road books, has Peter Fleming's classic "News From Tartary" been mentioned?
Thurbron was never among my favorites, but he certainly is a well respected author. He is a bit too dry for me, most of the time.
He has a new book out on Tibet:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookreviews/8301078/To-a-Mountain-inTibet-by-Colin-Thubron-review.html
Do not overlook his earlier books, including: WHERE NIGHTS ARE LONGEST: TRAVELS BY CAR THROUGH WESTERN RUSSIA.
A few good reads (novels) about women ex-pats in China:
Foreign Babes in Beijing (pretty funny and astute!)
Nicole Mones' Lost in Translation, A Cup of Light, The Last Chinese Chef.
Also - I read Red China Blues awhile ago - I didn't think it was remarkable...
Anything by Peter Hessler or Simon Winchester is worth the time, I think
Yesterday I went to see the movie "Empire of Silver" set in late 19th century China of a powerful banking empire in Shanxi Province. Beautifully shot, worth watching just to learn the history and culture of that era.
Interesting book review, even if you don't read the book:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/26/books/review/book-review-cambodias-curse-by-joel-brinkley.html?ref=books
Thanks, Thursday!
I am going to mention a book I just read that is partly set in Asia. The conceit here is that the writer travels around the world on the most dangerous or uncomfortable conveyances he can find, which include overloaded ferries in Bangladesh and Indonesia, buses in Peru, trains in Mali/Senegal, commuter trains in India, etc etc.
It certainly is not an essential read but might be worth considering for that long train ride!
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703862704575099943371446092.html
Informative recent "In Our Time" podcast on Shinto:
http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/iot/iot_20110922-1100a.mp3
I just finished "Stone of Heaven" by Adrian Levy and Cathy Scott-Clark. Fascinating look at the history of jade and jadeite.
New book on Burma by well-respected author; sounds very well worth reading:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/23/books/review/where-china-meets-india-by-thant-myint-u-book-review.html?_r=1&ref=books
topping for PattyRoth
Thanks, ekscrunchy! I'll look for it!
Amazon alerts me to any books having to do with Burma, and as soon as I saw this, I put it on my wish list. Maybe I should buy it before we go and read it there.
And here is a non-fiction one that I read last week, about India. In the "recommended extra reading" category:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/jun/05/beautiful-damned-siddhartha-deb-review
Also about India is this novel which is very well written' I've just started it and am enjoying. Author won the Booker Prize for his last book.
http://www.amazon.com/Last-Man-Tower-Aravind-Adiga/dp/0307594092/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpt_2
Has anyone else read Kissinger's ON CHINA? I am enjoying some of the "inside baseball" accounts, but am chafing unhappily at its careful tone.
Ok, new book. About India this time. This one is in the "essential" category:
http://www.amazon.com/Behind-Beautiful-Forevers-Mumbai-undercity/dp/1400067553
Anyone have any books to recommend on Java? I've been looking for memoirs, fiction, etc about Java and have turned up very little.
Kathie:
The most sustained literary effort, I suppose, would be to read the entire BURU QUARTET by Pramoedya Ananta Toer, who is widely held to be Indonesia's most accomplished writer. I must confess that I have only thus far read book 1: THIS EARTH OF MANKIND. I found it very engaging, but then I needed a break and somehow haven't yet gone back.
When I was visiting Indonesia last year, the British Women's Association was nice enough to let me attend a meeting of their book group to discuss Hella Haasse's THE TEA LORDS, then newly translated from Dutch to English. Definitely do pick up a copy of this story set on Java for both local history and for broader insight into Dutch colonialism in the East Indies.
There are two travelogue-adventure-type books that are dated, but I found them helpful (among slim pickings, as you acknowledge) in my effort to learn something about the country before going there.
AN EMPIRE OF THE EAST: TRAVELS IN INDONESIA by Norman Lewis
DISTANT ISLANDS: TRAVELS ACROSS INDONESIA by Charles Corn
Marmot highly recommended THE YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY by Christopher Koch. I had seen the film with Mel Gibson/Linda Hunt years prior and I bet that you have also seen it. She said that it contained much more than what the film adaptation captured. Agreed! I did like the book very much.
Have you already read KRAKATOA: THE DAY THE WORLD EXPLODED etc. by Simon Winchester? It is packed with so much science, history, politics...fabulous. Krakatoa is located, as you know, in the strait between Java and Sumatra.
I look forward to seeing what else is recommended.
Great ideas, marya! I note that I read a travelogue by Norman Lewis of Burma, so it will be interesting to read his observations of Indonesia.
My first Amazon search for "Java" turned up only computer books - lol.
I've just ordered many of those books (all but BURU QUARTET), and found another travelogue to order "Across the Equator, a Holiday Trip in Java" - Thomas H. Reid I think I have enough to keep me entertained for the time being! Many thanks.
I love the Year of Living Dangerously and re-read it regularly. I try, but I can't get enthusiastic about Pramoedya Toer.
Simon Winchester's book on Kratatoa is a compendium of information about the culture, geography and history and of course the geology of the era and area.
I'd also look for a biography of Stamford Raffles focusing on his time in Java and his impact on the restoration of Borobudur. Raffles of the Eastern Isles is good, but I'm not sure it's still in print.
Norman Lewis was a bit crochety by the time he got to Indonesia. He skips Java. I especially like VS Naipul's Among the Believers and the sequel, Beyond Belief: excellent commentaries on non-Arab Islam.
Actually any understanding of tropical Islam and the politics of Sukarno and Soeharto is essential for an understanding of Java. Understanding Islam in Indonesia is very good but very dry.
Thanks, marmot, for some additional titles. Most of the books I just ordered are out of print, but I was able to find them on Amazon resellers for reasonable prices.
Have not yet read this soon-to-be-released and well reviewed book, but since it belongs to the tiny genre of English-language memoirs about the Cambodian genocide, I'll mention it here; I have it on my library list and some of you might want to add it as well:
http://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Banyan-Novel-Vaddey-Ratner/dp/1451657706/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1342458490&sr=1-1&keywords=shadow+of+the+banyan
Copied from the Oriental List:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/03/books/review/bureaucracy-lit-in-china.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&
In the Shadow of the Banyon, mentioned above, about the Cambodian genocide, is a very good read. While it is told as a fictional account, it is also a memoir of a survivor of the royal family. I highly recommend it.
I don't know if anyone has mentioned this very well written book, From the Land of Green Ghosts by Pascal Thwe. It is the true story of his life as a child in a Burmese hill tribe, his odyssey to study at the university, his escape from government forces during the student uprisings and his sponsorship to England and Cambridge by a professor he meets while in Burma. It is an excellent book and very well written. I couldn't put it down.
Stranger in the Forest: On Foot Across Borneo, by Eric Hansen
Truth can certainly be stranger than fiction. Fascinating.
http://www.amazon.com/Stranger-Forest-Foot-Across-Borneo/dp/0375724958/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1359926689&sr=1-1&keywords=eric+hansen
So many new books since this was first posted;
I will start with two obvious ones, about India:
MAXIMUM CITY
http://www.amazon.com/Maximum-City-Bombay-Lost-Found/dp/0375703403
BEHIND THE BEAUTIFUL FOREVERS by Katherine Boo, multiple award winner from 2012
Eric Hansen, mentioned above, is also the author of the classic MOTORING WITH MOHAMMAD, about travels in Yemen. Highly recommended!
http://www.amazon.com/Motoring-Mohammed-Journeys-Yemen-Red/dp/067973855X
Novel with connection to Asia; I liked this quite a lot:
http://www.amazon.com/Newlyweds-Nell-Freudenberger/dp/0307268845
Ekscrunchy - 'Motoring with Mohammad' is my 3rd favorite book of Hansen's. Ahead of it is 'Orchid Fever: A Horticultural Tale of Love, Lust & Lunacy', some of which appropriately takes place in Asia.
I told Eric that I'd read 'Orchid Fever' sitting in front of a fan in Penestanan in Bali. He told me he'd written the last draft of 'Stranger in the Forest' in the same place. Small world.
Thanks for that..I will put the book on my list. He is a good writer!
Also about Borneo, but probably mentioned many times before, the classic book by Redmond O'Hanlon:
http://www.amazon.com/Into-Heart-Borneo-Redmond-OHanlon/dp/0394755405
Tallking about good reads, this takes place partly in Asia:
http://www.amazon.com/Equator-Journey-Thurston-Clarke/dp/0380729415/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1359984009&sr=1-2&keywords=equator
One I read recently that may interest you, picked up in a UK used book shop, is 'In Search of Conrad' by Gavin Young. Takes place in the same general region following the SE Asian voyages of Conrad.
http://www.amazon.com/Search-Conrad-Gavin-Young/dp/0571252826/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1359997511&sr=1-1&keywords=in+search+of+conrad