Jan
15

10 Second Interview with Jung Chang and John Halliday

By

Recently I was searching through Amazon for reviews of the book, “Mao the untold story” by Jung Chang when I found this interview on the Amazon web site.  The book is sitting on my night stand while I finish up her first book, “Wild Swans”.  I have read the introduction and skipped through some of the chapters and can not wait to sit down with the whole thing.

The story of Mao is so interesting and central to understanding modern China.  Today the world is a different place and China is changing like all of the rest of us.  Modern China is nothing like it was 30 and 40 years ago but it is difficult to through off the past completely.

The authors of the book talk about their love for China and dedication to their home country which I appreaciate.


Q: From idea to finished book, how long did Mao: The Unknown Story take to research and write?
A: Over a decade.Q: What was your writing process like? How did you two collaborate on this project?
A: The research shook itself out by language. Jung did all the Chinese-language research, and Jon did the other languages, of which Russian was the most important, as Mao had a long-term intimate relationship with Stalin. After our research trips around the world, we would work in our separate studies in London. We would then rendezvous at lunch to exchange discoveries.Q: Do you have any thoughts about how the book is, or will be received in China? Did that play a part in your writing of the book?
A: The book is banned in China, because the current Communist regime is fiercely perpetuating the myth of Mao. Today Mao’s portrait and his corpse still dominate Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing, and the regime declares itself to be Mao’s heir. The government blocked the distribution of an issue of The Far Eastern Economic Review, and told the magazine’s owners, Dow Jones, that this was because that issue contained a review of our book. The regime also tore the review of our book out of The Economist magazine that was going to (very restricted) newsstands. We are not surprised that the book is banned. The regime’s attitude had no influence on how we wrote the book. We hope many copies will find their way into China.Q: What is the one thing you hope readers get from your book?
A: Mao was responsible for the deaths of well over 70 million Chinese in peacetime, and he was bent on dominating the world. As China is today emerging as an economic and military power, the world can never regard it as a benign force unless Beijing rejects Mao and all his legacies. We hope our book will help push China in this direction by telling the truth about Mao.

Breakdown of a BIG Book: 5 Things You’ll Learn from Mao: The Unknown Story
1. Mao became a Communist at the age of 27 for purely pragmatic reasons: a job and income from the Russians.2. Far from organizing the Long March in 1934, Mao was nearly left behind by his colleagues who could not stand him and had tried to oust him several times. The aim of the March was to link up with Russia to get arms. The Reds survived the March because Chiang Kai-shek let them, in a secret horse-trade for his son and heir, whom Stalin was holding hostage in Russia.3. Mao grew opium on a large scale.4. After he conquered China, Mao’s over-riding goal was to become a superpower and dominate the world: “Control the Earth,” as he put it.5. Mao caused the greatest famine in history by exporting food to Russia to buy nuclear and arms industries: 38 million people were starved and slave-driven to death in 1958-61. Mao knew exactly what was happening, saying: “half of China may well have to die.”

Categories : Books, General

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