No Wall Too High: One Man’s Extraordinary Escape from Mao’s Infamous Labour Camps

Author:   Xu Hongci ,  Erling Hoh
Publisher:   Ebury Publishing
ISBN:  

9781846044984


Pages:   336
Publication Date:   08 February 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $50.00 Quantity:  
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No Wall Too High: One Man’s Extraordinary Escape from Mao’s Infamous Labour Camps


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Author:   Xu Hongci ,  Erling Hoh
Publisher:   Ebury Publishing
Imprint:   Rider & Co
Dimensions:   Width: 12.60cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 19.80cm
Weight:   0.229kg
ISBN:  

9781846044984


ISBN 10:   1846044987
Pages:   336
Publication Date:   08 February 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.
Language:   English

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Reviews

Gripping, moving and eye-opening * Asian Review of Books * A masterpiece...Xu is the only known escapee from Mao's prisons * Washington Post * [Xu Hongci] takes the reader on a turbulent and fraught journey of capture, escape, evasion, survival and love. Translated with immense skill and talent, it's a thrilling read. * The Bookbag * There are escape stories and then there is this. It deserves to become a classic, like Jung Chang's Wild Swans, not only for Xu Hongci's survival against the odds, but for confronting us unsparingly with what happens when folly and intolerance meet unfettered political power. * THE NATIONAL (Scotland) * Reads like a Hollywood film - but this account is true. * PRESS ASSOCIATION 'Book of the Week' * Gripping... an inspiring story of the strength of the human spirit in the face of greed and cruelty. * SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST * An understated tribute to those who suffered, and a thrilling account of numerous acts of defiance: small or large, often costly. * SUNDAY TELEGRAPH * An important book: the gripping and deeply moving account of a man's lifelong struggle to reach freedom, driven by an indomitable will to survive in Mao's China. * XIAOLU GUA, author of Once Upon a Time in the East * I am struck by the freshness of Xu Hongci's whole story. We have plenty of reminiscences by intellectuals and party officials in China, but it is rare to find memoirs of ordinary people. And most tend to focus on the Cultural Revolution, whereas Xu Hongci starts his account with the Second World War, giving the reader a much better sense of how the entire Maoist era evolved over time. While most memoirs tell us how the victims are eventually crushed by an unforgiving system, one of the most striking aspects of Xu's account is his determination to gain freedom. Xu escapes again and again, his moral integrity seemingly unbroken. * PROF FRANK DIKOTTER, author of Mao's Great Famine * Xu Hongci is China's Louis Zamperini, an ordinary man who simply refused to be broken. To understand the deepest source of China's rise, read Xu Hongci's astonishing epic, a tale of ingenuity, bravery and, most importantly, unshakeable determination. Xu's chronicle, masterfully translated by Erling Hoh, is the story of modern China itself: the struggle for freedom of body and mind. * EVAN OSNOS, China correspondent at the New Yorker and author of the acclaimed Age of Ambition * While there are notable victims' accounts of Nazi and Soviet atrocities, there has largely been silence from those who actually suffered at first hand the worst of Red China's astounding inhumanity to its own people. Xu's moving account [is] a must-read * DAILY MAIL * Riveting...There are many memoirs by Chinese imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), but I've never read one, by a loyal Party member, like this...While books such as this cannot be openly sold in China, Xu Hongci's will of course be smuggled in and will amaze readers, especially those under forty. * JONATHAN MIRSKY, Literary Review * One of the most compelling and moving memoirs to emerge from Communist China...gripping. * LOS ANGELES TIMES * One of the greatest escape stories I've ever read...will live on as a timeless testament to the resilience of the human spirit * MAIL ON SUNDAY *


One of the greatest escape stories I've ever read...will live on as a timeless testament to the resilience of the human spirit * MAIL ON SUNDAY * One of the most compelling and moving memoirs to emerge from Communist China...gripping. * LOS ANGELES TIMES * Riveting...There are many memoirs by Chinese imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), but I've never read one, by a loyal Party member, like this...While books such as this cannot be openly sold in China, Xu Hongci's will of course be smuggled in and will amaze readers, especially those under forty. * JONATHAN MIRSKY, Literary Review * While there are notable victims' accounts of Nazi and Soviet atrocities, there has largely been silence from those who actually suffered at first hand the worst of Red China's astounding inhumanity to its own people. Xu's moving account [is] a must-read * DAILY MAIL * Xu Hongci is China's Louis Zamperini, an ordinary man who simply refused to be broken. To understand the deepest source of China's rise, read Xu Hongci's astonishing epic, a tale of ingenuity, bravery and, most importantly, unshakeable determination. Xu's chronicle, masterfully translated by Erling Hoh, is the story of modern China itself: the struggle for freedom of body and mind. * EVAN OSNOS, China correspondent at the New Yorker and author of the acclaimed Age of Ambition *


Author Information

Xu Hongci It took Xu Hongci four attempts before he finally escaped the labour camps. He then travelled the length of China into Mongolia - only to be arrested and sentenced to two years in a Mongolian prison for illegally entering the country. After serving his sentence, Xu Hongci met and married a Mongolian nurse, started a family and, after Mao's death, returned to China where he died in 2008. Erling Hoh Erling Hoh is a Swedish-Chinese journalist who came across a Chinese copy of Xu Hongci's memoir in a Hong Kong library. After tracking down Xu Hongci's Chinese publisher and, eventually, his wife and children, he obtained the original manuscript that contained much richer content than the original Chinese edition.

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