All things old China - books, anecdotes, stories, podcasts, factoids & ramblings from the author Paul French

The By Their Own Compass Podcast – Emily Hahn’s Shanghai

Posted: January 11th, 2026 | No Comments »

The By Their Own Compass Podcast – the new podcast from historian Jeremiah Jenne and travel guru Sarah Keenleyside (both of whom may be familiar to you if you are involved in China) has an episode on Emily Hahn. And a bonus episode on Hahn’s Shanghai and what’s left of it with Tina Kanagarathnam of Historic Shanghai….

‘We’re following the travels of Emily “Mickey” Hahn in 1930s China. Mickey Hahn was a writer, an adventurer, and a professional rule breaker whose wanderlust took her from the American Midwest to Europe and Africa and finally to China, all before she turned 30.

By the time she got to China, she had already established herself as an up-and-coming literary voice and one of the New Yorker’s earliest star writers. In her career, she published 54 books and over 200 articles, but her most famous book is China to Me, a memoir of the years that we’re going to talk about in this episode.

She partied with poets (and her pet gibbon) at Shanghai soirees. Wrote biographies while dodging bombs in wartime Chongqing, and did her best to keep herself and her family alive in Japanese-occupied Hong Kong. Along the way, she became famous (some might add “notorious”) for her affairs, including with Chinese writer Sinmay Zau (Shao Xunmei 邵洵美) and the head of British intelligence in Hong Kong, Charles Boxer.

Mickey lived through some of China’s most tumultuous moments. While many foreigners experienced these events, Mickey gave her readers an unvarnished look at what was happening, with a style all her own.

We’ll explore Mickey’s life, travels, and adventures, and we’ll also discuss how to follow in her footsteps today through the modern cities of Chongqing, Hong Kong, and especially Shanghai.’



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