WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
China Revolutionized cover

China Revolutionized

Chapter 36: PRESS COMMENTS
Open in WeRead

About This Book

This study chronicles the collapse of imperial government and the rise of a republican regime, tracing political causes, uprisings, and institutional responses. It situates the revolution within broader social and economic change, analyzing industry, finance, rail and water transport, commerce, agriculture, and urban development. It considers foreign influence, diplomacy, and the presence and practices of foreign communities and missionaries. Separate chapters survey military reform, modern education, literature and language, legal practice and crime, daily life and women’s roles, public works, architecture and art, climate and hygiene, and other sociological aspects that illuminate the transition to a modern state.


THE CHINESE

By John Stuart Thomson; published by The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Indianapolis and New York; seventy-one splendid illustrations, three colored maps, $2.50; and by T. Warner Laurie, Fleet Street, London, 12s. 6d.

PRESS COMMENTS

Cook’s Tours Annual, 1911–12, page 108, recommends this book to world tourists.

Philadelphia Item: “It is not only the most authoritative, valuable and up-to-date book on China; it is also the most readable.”

Paris La Nouvelle Revue: “You will not find its equal as first-hand information. Treated with marvelous mastership ... a keen observer ... full of puissant interest.”

New York Herald: “A very complete view, graphically dealt with.”

New York American: “The definitive book on China.”

New York Evening Post and New York Nation: “Relates in a humorous vein his rich observations. It is refreshing to find so much valuable and fresh information expressed in a quaint and original manner. A comprehensive grasp of the greatest problem of the Far East.... Prophetic words.... One of the most interesting and instructive books on the Chinese; ... most charming.”

New York Tribune: “A fund of descriptive information.”

New York Times: “The British reviewers speak as enthusiastically of this book as the American journals have done. Written in a pleasant and easy manner.... He is the happy possessor of a highly developed efficiency and sense of humor.... Should prove agreeable to a great circle of readers.... Excellent descriptive powers and gift of observation.... Of inestimable use to the student, merchant or traveler.”

New York Sun: “Fresh and seeing eyes; a flowing pen; that human sympathy which counts greatly in gaining sympathetic readers; an astonishing quantity of facts presented with so light a hand as to invite the reader on almost every page; ... brilliantly clear photographs; Mr. Thomson’s text itself is almost pictorial.”

Chicago Journal: “The only readable book ever written about that weirdly interesting people.”

Columbus Journal: “A book that is believed to be the best English definition yet given of the Chinese and their country.”

Portland, Oregon, Chamber of Commerce Bulletin: “This volume is in the forefront of them all.”

Philadelphia Press: “For the American there is no book on China equal to this one.”

Pittsburgh Dispatch: “Our leading authority on Far Eastern questions; he enunciates the American doctrine of the Far East.”

London News: “Few writers have dealt satisfactorily with the subject, and there was plenty of room for such a book as The Chinese.... He has given a valuable and instructive picture of China as she stands to-day at her time of crisis.”

London Times: “Knows China intimately; keen eye for detail; terse and graphic style; ... mass of information.”

Hongkong, China, Mail: “Keenly observant; shrewd and sympathetic insight; ... a vision of China of the present day, very telling in its brightness and jauntiness of comparison; splendidly phrased.”

New York Commercial: “Most acute and pertinent observer. Fascinating qualities of style not unworthy of the brilliant pen of Macaulay. The book has a deep and permanent delight.”

Chicago Banker: “A new authoritative treatise by a writer resident in China for years.”

Edinburgh Scotsman: “It may be doubted if there has been a volume published for a long time which gives a better idea of the present condition of the country.... He gives a vivid impression and is endowed with a gift of humor.”