“Chop Fry Watch Learn: Fu Pei-mei and the Making of Modern Chinese Food” by Michelle T King
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Kristen Yee
5h ago
The food of Taiwan has been the subject of a number of recent books, such as Frankie Gaw’s First Generation and Clarissa Wei’s Made in Taiwan. Chop Fry Watch Learn by Michelle King joins them, although it is a scholarly work, rather than providing recipes. While the first  two do also include cultural, historical, and personal background, Michelle King’s work delves deeper as it follows the journey of Fu Pei-Mei, one of the first TV presenters on food and author of bilingual Chinese cookbooks. Chop Fry Watch Learn: Fu Pei-mei and the Making of Modern Chinese Food, Michelle T King (WW Nort ..read more
Visit website
New Book Announcement: “Adivasi Art And Activism: Curation in a Nationalist Age” by Alice Tilche
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Editor
21h ago
Adivasi Art And Activism: Curation in a Nationalist Age, Alice Tilche (Permanent Black, April 2024) As India consolidates an aggressive model of economic development, indigenous tribal people—the Adivasis—continue to be overrepresented among the country’s poor. Adivasis make up more than eight hundred communities in India, with a total population of more than a hundred million people speaking more than three hundred different languages. Although their historical presence is acknowledged by the state and they are lauded as part of India’s ethnic identity, their poverty has been compounded by th ..read more
Visit website
“Activism and Post-activism: Korean Documentary Cinema, 1981-2022” by Jihoon Kim
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Christopher Corker
4d ago
Publisher Oxford University Press hails Activism and Post-activism as the first-ever English language work on the birth and development of South Korean nonfiction film. Drawing on more than 200 films and videos, Jihoon Kim’s trailblazing book charts the history of documentary filmmaking in the South from its early “activism” period in the 1980s to what the author calls its modern “post-activism” period in the late ’90s and 2000s. In doing so, Kim highlights the work of marginalized groups—including women, sexual minorities, and the working class—who, without the ease of access modern technolog ..read more
Visit website
“Bankrolling Empire: Family Fortunes and Political Transformation in Mughal India” by Sudev Sheth
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Peter Gordon
1w ago
Although subtitled “Family Fortunes” and presented as being the story of the Jhaveri business family in Gujarat, Sudev Sheth’s recent history Bankrolling Empire is as much, if not more, about the wider arc of the decline of the Mughal Empire. Whether one is interested in the specific role of finance in the Mughal Empire or the jigsaw puzzle that is Mughal history, one is likely to come away from this well-written and colorful book quite the wiser. Sheth opens, as is the wont of even academic histories these days, with an episode of drama, when in 1726, one the later Jhaveris, Khushalchand, was ..read more
Visit website
“The Glass Islands: A Year in Lombok” by Mark Heyward
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Frank Beyer
2w ago
The Glass Islands: A Year in Lombok chronicles Australian Mark Heyward’s triumphs and struggles in building a house on the Indonesian island directly east of Bali. The idea behind the title is that the islands of Indonesia are opaque and don’t reveal their troubled histories apart from in the odd transparent, or glass-like, moment. Not only does Heyward want to build the house, but he needs to work with other expats, and local villagers to construct a road to access the property. Thankfully, the book strays well beyond tales of construction because the author’s multi-decade experience of livin ..read more
Visit website
“Searching for Billie: A Journalist’s Quest to Understand His Mother’s Past Leads Him to Discover a Vanished China” by Ian Gill
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Susan Blumberg-Kason
2w ago
In 1975, journalist Ian Gill met up with his mother Billie in Hong Kong. He flew in from his home in New Zealand while she came from her home in Geneva. They hadn’t seen each other in a few years and Ian thought it would be just a chance to catch up with his mother. He had never visited Hong Kong and Billie hadn’t been back since World War II. Instead of a quiet holiday, Billie started introducing Ian to her old friends, friends she had known during the War. Ian knew very little about his mother’s years in China and Hong Kong, and what he began learning on that trip started to seem worthy of a ..read more
Visit website
“Not Your China Doll: The Wild and Shimmering Life of Anna May Wong” by Katie Gee Salisbury
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Susan Blumberg-Kason
3w ago
Over the last few years, there’s been a renewed interest in pre-War Chinese-American film star Anna May Wong. A screenplay by David Henry Hwang starring Gemma Chan is in the works and the US Mint recently issued a quarter to commemorate her. A novel and narrative non-fiction study were published last year, but there hasn’t been a complete biography of her published in the United States until now. Katie Gee Salisbury, from Anna May’s hometown of Los Angeles, has captivatingly filled this gap in Not Your China Doll: The Wild and Shimmering Life of Anna May Wong, and none too soon at that. The fi ..read more
Visit website
“Judgement at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia” by Gary J Bass
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Ian Rapley
3w ago
As the Second World War began to reach its conclusion, the victorious allies turned their thoughts towards the peace that would follow. The Potsdam Declaration, in calling for Japan’s surrender, had declared that “stern justice [would] be meted out to all war criminals.” Gary J Bass’s Judgement At Tokyo is an engrossing study of the main trial which resulted: the International Military Tribunal in the Far East. Across some 800 plus pages, he charts the establishment, conduct, and aftermath of the Tokyo Trial, looking at the judges’ internal deliberations, the court proceedings, and their recep ..read more
Visit website
“The Buddha: Life and Afterlife between East and West” by Philip C Almond
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Soni Wadhwa
3w ago
The Buddha of the Mahayana tradition anchored in such ancient Indian texts as the Jataka Tales or the epic Buddhacharita is a godly figure: he is born without causing any pain or suffering to his mother; he is born without sexual reproduction, moving from the heaven to the womb of his mother in the form of an elephant. Or that he is omniscient at birth. He speaks and walks immediately after his birth. Yet, this is not the Buddha that most people would recognize today or associate with the Buddhism of meditation and mindfulness. In his book The Buddha: Life and Afterlife between East and West ..read more
Visit website
New Book Announcement: “Gandhi’s Australia, Australia’s Gandhi” by Thomas Weber
Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction
by Editor
1M ago
Gandhi’s Australia, Australia’s Gandhi, Thomas Weber (Orient BlackSwan, March 2024) Gandhi’s importance in the Western world, and his interaction with foreign visitors, have been well-documented. However, most of these accounts have focused on Britain and the United States. Today, as India’s diaspora grows in numbers and influence, the inspiration of Gandhi in other parts of the world needs to be understood. This is particularly true of Australia. In Gandhi’s Australia, Australia’s Gandhi, Thomas Weber takes readers on a journey examining Gandhi’s perceptions of Australia and the ways in which ..read more
Visit website

Follow Asian Review Of Books » Non-Fiction on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR