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Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China » (Reprint)

Book cover image of Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China by Jung Chang

Authors: Jung Chang
ISBN-13: 9780743246989, ISBN-10: 0743246985
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: August 2003
Edition: Reprint

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Author Biography: Jung Chang


JUNG CHANG was born in Yibin, Sichuan Province, China, in 1952. She left China for Britain in 1978 and obtained a Ph.D. in linguistics from York University in 1982, the first person from the People¹s Republic of China to receive a doctorate from a British university. She lives in London and has recently completed a biography of Mao.

Book Synopsis


Blending the intimacy of memoir and the panoramic sweep of eyewitness history, Wild Swans has become a bestselling classic in thirty languages, with more than ten million copies sold. The story of three generations in twentieth-century China, it is an engrossing record of Mao's impact on China, an unusual window on the female experience in the modern world, and an inspiring tale of courage and love.

Jung Chang describes the life of her grandmother, a warlord's concubine; her mother's struggles as a young idealistic Communist; and her parents' experience as members of the Communist elite and their ordeal during the Cultural Revolution. Chang was a Red Guard briefly at the age of fourteen, then worked as a peasant, a "barefoot doctor," a steelworker, and an electrician. As the story of each generation unfolds, Chang captures in gripping, moving -- and ultimately uplifting -- detail the cycles of violent drama visited on her own family and millions of others caught in the whirlwind of history.

Publishers Weekly

Bursting with drama, heartbreak and horror, this extraordinary family portrait mirrors China's century of turbulence. Chang's grandmother, Yu-fang, had her feet bound at age two and in 1924 was sold as a concubine to Beijing's police chief. Yu-fang escaped slavery in a brothel by fleeing her ``husband'' with her infant daughter, Bao Qin, Chang's mother-to-be. Growing up during Japan's brutal occupation, free-spirited Bao Qin chose the man she would marry, a Communist Party official slavishly devoted to the revolution. In 1949, while he drove 1000 miles in a jeep to the southwestern province where they would do Mao's spadework, Bao Qin walked alongside the vehicle, sick and pregnant (she lost the child). Chang, born in 1952, saw her mother put into a detention camp in the Cultural Revolution and later ``rehabilitated.'' Her father was denounced and publicly humiliated; his mind snapped, and he died a broken man in 1975. Working as a ``barefoot doctor'' with no training, Chang saw the oppressive, inhuman side of communism. She left China in 1978 and is now director of Chinese studies at London University. Her meticulous, transparent prose radiates an inner strength. Photos. BOMC alternate. (Sept.)

Table of Contents

1"Three-Inch Golden Lilies": Concubine to a Warlord General (1909-1933)21
2"Even Plain Cold Water Is Sweet": My Grandmother Marries a Manchu Doctor (1933-1938)43
3"They All Say What a Happy Place Manchukuo Is": Life under the Japanese (1938-1945)62
4"Slaves Who Have No Country of Your Own": Ruled by Different Masters (1945-1947)75
5"Daughter for Sale for 10 Kilos of Rice": In Battle for a New China (1947-1948)94
6"Talking about Love": A Revolutionary Marriage (1948-1949)115
7"Going through the Five Mountain Passes": My Mother's Long March (1949-1950)140
8"Returning Home Robed in Embroidered Silk": To Family and Bandits (1949-1951)151
9"When a Man Gets Power, Even His Chickens and Dogs Rise to Heaven": Living with an Incorruptible Man (1951-1953)170
10"Suffering Will Make You a Better Communist": My Mother Falls under Suspicion (1953-1956)191
11"After the Anti-Rightist Campaign No One Opens Their Mouth": China Silenced (1956-1958)204
12"Capable Women Can Make a Meal without Food": Famine (1958-1962)220
13"Thousand-Gold Little Precious": In a Privileged Cocoon (1958-1965)240
14"Father Is Close, Mother Is Close, but Neither Is as Close as Chairman Mao": The Cult of Mao (1964-1965)256
15"Destroy First, and Construction Will Look After Itself": The Cultural Revolution Begins (1965-1966)273
16"Soar to Heaven, and Pierce the Earth": Mao's Red guards (June-August 1966)297
17"Do You Want Our Children to Become 'Blacks'?": My Parents' Dilemma (August-October 1966)282
18"More Than Gigantic Wonderful News": Pilgrimage to Peking (October-December 1966)308
19"Where There Is a Will to Condemn, There Is Evidence": My Parents Tormented (December 1966-1967)323
20"I Will Not Sell My Soul": My Father Arrested (1967-1968)341
21"Giving Charcoal in Snow": My Siblings and My Friends (1967-1968)362
22"Thought Reform through Labor": To the Edge of the Himalayas (January-June 1969)379
23"The More Books You Read, the More Stupid You Become": I Work as a Peasant and a Barefoot Doctor (June 1969-1971)406
24"Please Accept My Apologies That Come a Lifetime Too Late": My Parents in Camps (1969-1972)429
25"The Fragrance of Sweet Wind": A New Life with The Electricians' Manual and Six Crises (1972-1973)444
26"Sniffing after Foreigners' Farts and Calling Them Sweet": Learning English in Mao's Wake (1972-1974)458
27"If This Is Paradise, What Then Is Hell?": The Death of My Father (1974-1976)475
28Fighting to Take Wing (1976-1978)495
Epilogue506
Index509

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