Posted: December 22nd, 2011 | No Comments »
A well deserved plug for the new Pathlight Magazine that’s bringing out more contemporary Chinese fiction and writing in English – details all as below – well worth supporting though like all Chinese government ventures the promotion may leave a bit to be desired so it’s needs to be shouted from the rooftops as so often with these things – good folk involved though.
Pathlight magazine is a new English-language literary magazine produced by Paper Republic and People’s Literature Magazine (《人民文å¦ã€‹æ‚志社). It is currently in trial publication period—the first issue came out on November 20, and the second issue will be published in advance of the 2012 London Book Fair, where China will be the Market Focus.
Distribution is currently limited, though the first issue can be purchased on Amazon—they will deliver internationally. For specific inquiries, please contact Pathlight Managing Editor Alice Xin Liu at alicexinliu@paper-republic.org.
Sign up here for notifications on new issues of Pathlight magazine, and how to get them. Contents below
Issue One: Mao Dun Literature Prize

Feature: 8th Mao Dun Literature Prize
| Zhang Wei |
You Are on the Highland |
| Liu Xinglong |
Holy Heaven’s Gate |
| Liu Zhenyun |
A Word is Worth Ten Thousand Words |
Fiction / Non-Fiction
| Jiang Yitan |
‘China Story’ |
| Di An |
‘Williams’ Tomb’ |
| Qi Ge |
‘The Sugar Blower’ |
| Xiang Zuotie |
‘A Rare Steed for the Martial Emperor’ and ‘Raising Whales’ |
| Li Juan |
‘The Winter of 2009’ and ‘The Road to Weeping Spring’ |
Poetry
|
| Lei Pingyang |
Prayer-Poem on Mt. Jinuo, White Herons, Keeping a Cat, Going Home for a Funeral, The Myna Bird Asks a Question, Collectivist Insect Calls, and Abandoned City |
| Hou Ma |
Bloodsucking Rapture, Subway, Li Hong’s Kiss and A Wolf? In Sheep’s Clothing? |
| Sun Lei |
Travel |
| Yu Xiang |
Sunlight Shines Where It’s Needed, My House, They, A Gust of Wind, Low Key, It Goes Without Saying, Holy Front and Street |
| Wong Leung Wo |
At Midnight, I See Your Shoes in the Bathroom, Father, This is the Last Day, The Story of Santa and I Thought We Wouldn’t Meet Again |
| Xi Chuan |
The Body and History, Ill Fortune H 00325, Looking at the Mural in the Ruicheng Temple of Eternal Joy and Dragon |
Editor’s Pick
| Li Er |
‘Stephen’s Back’ |
Posted: December 21st, 2011 | No Comments »
Fortunately it seems plenty of people remembered that I did once, in the dim and distant past, pen a book on North Korea. So, among the flood of the last few days, I’ve also been doing my own level best to try and work out what we lost when Kim2 died and what we might get with Kim3 in the ascendant.
On the UK’s ITN Channel 4 News with Jon Snow being a being a bit cheeky about one fat boy taking over from another! click here
A somewhat serious analysis of some issues raised for the Asia Society – click here
And a fairly snarky but hopefully fun piece for Foreign Policy – click here
And my book‘s still out there though Amazon seems to be shifting a few!! (first edition cover below for a change and because I always liked it)

Posted: December 21st, 2011 | No Comments »
If you’ve got a cold head then you need a hat – obvious. But please none of those slightly too small cheap trilby hats that are so beloved of wanna-be hipsters these days everywhere from Shoreditch to Melbourne I’ve noted and definitely no baseball caps…anywhere, anytime. No chavvy baseball caps I’m sure at the La Union Hat Company on the Nanking Road, just proper men’s headwear and charming ladies wear. This ad of course actually from the summer months of 1940 when Panama’s and Borsalino’s were the thing.
Still some things never change – those fake Manila Panama’s were on the market back then just as muppets today buy fake New York Yankees caps to look retarded.

Posted: December 21st, 2011 | No Comments »
It’s Christmas and the booze is free flowing to celebrate a great year – we toast the loss of a great one in Christopher Hitchens and we toast twice the loss of a bad one – Kim Jong-il (which still doesn’t balance the loss of Hitch). And it means that I do my one post of the year (I have to be a bit drunk to do it – I must have been well pissed when I felt confident enough to comment on Gok Wan) on fashion!!
According to Gotham there’s a Chinoiserie revival in New York fashion and they’re citing everything from Dietrich in Shanghai Express to David Bowie’s China Girl cover (uhhmm, I’ll take the former as one of von Sternberg’s best but I think Bowie’s China Girl period is best forgotten).
Anyway, more details and pics of Chinois-inspired clothing and accessories here) And of course this all allows me to post a Dietrich shot, one of my favourite acts on this blog!

Posted: December 20th, 2011 | No Comments »
Not sure how this discounting thing works but pre-order Midnight in Peking on Amazon.co.uk and you get a discount – best seller futures I guess!!
Or pre-order itunes too apparently – here

Posted: December 19th, 2011 | No Comments »
Excuse me while I remind you that I did write a book back in 2005 (second edition 2008) with the recently departed KJI on the cover. Copies here, for a while at least. The Dear Leader is gone and perhaps someone, somewhere is genuinely sad about that, but hey, every cloud…..

Posted: December 18th, 2011 | 2 Comments »
A few things that may interest, but are really just self-promotion!
A Q&A on Midnight in Peking that ran in Time Out Hong Kong – apologies for the slightly odd nautically-themed picture!
A longish piece in the Asia Times here
Travelling around a bit lately I’ve seen piles of Midnight in the following shops in case you’re looking for one for Christmas!!
In Asia
In China of course there’s the Bookworm (see their annual top reads below) and Page One in Beijing, Garden Books in Shanghai and online with Amazon.cn (bargain price of RMB149 but they’ll only deliver if you live in the PRC I’m afraid)
Kinokuniya in the KLCC in KL has plenty and, if you’re in Malaysia you can buy it online here and read a review of the book in the Malaysian Sun
Prologue Books on Orchard Road in Singapore and Kinokuniya in Singapore too who also have it available online here. There;s also a nice feature on the book in Ex-Pat Living Magazine in Singapore (here)
Relay and Page One at Hong Kong Airport as well as Dymocks, Bookazine and Swindon throughout the SAR
If you’re heading down under:
Watermark stores in Sydney (look under ‘True crime’) and Melbourne (look under ‘history’) airports as well as Readings on Melbourne’s Lygon Street and other outlets and Dymocks throughout town
I haven’t checked but all good bookshops across Australia and New Zealand should have the book but you can also buy online direct from Penguin in Oz or Dymocks (postage only A$5!!)
And those crappy bookshops at Pudong Airport where three, yes three, Jobs titles are available for the techie morons!!
Sorry rest of the world but it’ll be everywhere come April 2012!

And from the Bookworm in Beijing:
The New York Times and
The Guardian recently released their end of the year top 100 book lists. If we had to choose our favorites of 2011, 100 might not be enough. Some books we’ve loved reading this year have been: Â
Jarmach’s Menagerie by Carol Birch,
Into the Silence by Wade Davis,
Midnight in Peking by Paul French,
The Sisters Brothers by Patrick Dewitt,
The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach,
Tide PLayers by Zha Jiaping,
The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman and
The Magician King by Lev Grossman.
And they all make excellent holiday gifts!
Happy reading!
The Bookworm
Posted: December 17th, 2011 | No Comments »
Forgotten Shanghai – ancient streets of the walled city
Shanghai is older than the foreign concessions. For 700 years it was a merchant city, a colony of leisure gardens and a multicultural hub. And today, inside the old walled city, one can still find living remnants of Shanghai’s history, including Ming Dynasty ruins and thousand-year-old streets. Our tour will start with a cup of coffee and a talk, then we’ll set off on our journey. Guided by Katya, who lives and breathes the old town, we’ll explore twisty lanes and vibrant markets, discover hidden temples and unlock Shanghai’s oldest courtyards.
Expert: Katya Knyazeva is a journalist and photographer born in Siberia. She has lived in East Asia for 7 years, producing illustrated books and animated features. Presently, Katya publishes articles on cuisine, culture and urban form and is completing a photographic atlas of Shanghai’s old town (to be published soon).
Time and meeting point: 10:00 – 13:00 at Old Westgate Hostel, 115 Penglai Lu (near Henan Nan Lu) (Subway station Lao Xi Men, Line 8 & 10, Exit 7)
Costs: RMB 300 p.p.
Number of Participants: max 16
Registration:Â at publicwalks(at)shanghai-flaneur.com or call 1381 8922 040