Posted: September 30th, 2017 | No Comments »
Sergeant Thomas Wilson, 35 years old, of the United States Marine Crops was rotated to Peking in the summer of 1933 to join the Legation Guard protecting the American Consulate in the city. On September 24th he killed himself with his shotgun in Legation Guard Barracks (below) just adjacent to the consulate compound (which you can still walk across today). The suicide caused chaos momentarily in the compound as it was close to the residence of the US Minister to China Nelson T Johnson.
Wilson, from Birmingham, Alabama, had previously served with the Marines in Nicaragua, left no suicide note. His wife Gladys was left in shock.


Posted: September 29th, 2017 | No Comments »
Lovely to see Nick Bonner and Simon Cockerell keeping themselves busy with the beautiful Made in North Korea: Graphics From Everyday Life in the DPRK – recommended for everyone’s coffee table immediately….

Made in North Korea uncovers the fascinating and surprisingly beautiful graphic culture of North Korea – from packaging to hotel brochures, luggage tags to tickets for the world-famous mass games. From his base in Beijing, Bonner has been running tours into North Korea for over twenty years, and along the way collecting graphic ephemera. He has amassed thousands of items that, as a collection, provide an extraordinary and rare insight into North Korea’s state-controlled graphic output, and the lives of ordinary North Koreans.
Posted: September 28th, 2017 | No Comments »
Recently the enterprising chaps at Taiwan’s Camphor Press (producers of great hard copy and e-book reprints) bought Eastbridge Books, a specialist Asian publisher. They’re reviving the house and reissuing titles as e-books. Including BJ Elder’s The Oriole’s Song: An American Girlhood in Wartime China….

The Oriole’s Song is a love story — love of family, of entwined cultures, of life itself — during and after the turmoil of war. This beautiful recollection of an American girlhood in China during World War II is a continual delight with large insights and small moments made exqusite by delicate prose. On May 17, 1951, Dwight Rugh — a Yale-in-China representative for twenty years and one of the last Americans remaining in China after the Communist Revolution — was taken from his home in Changsha to a mass rally where he was denounced as an imperialist spy. Twenty-three years later, his daughter was one of the first Americans to enter China after it reopened to the West. Despite the fact that the Cultural Revolution was in full sway, she visited the site of her father’s “trial†and met with some of his friends and colleagues who had been compelled to participate in the proceedings. In this evocative and beautifully written memoir, BJ Elder tells the remarkable story of her family and what it was like for her, an only child, to grow up in China during the Second World War. Born in Hunan, hers was a childhood spent in two languages and “between two names.†In a remote river town, she shares the terrors and enthusiasms of her Chinese friends, hides from Japanese bombs, struggles over Chinese calligraphy, and spends enchanted summers in a hidden valley. Yet she thinks of America as “home.†When the family goes home to the United States, however, she finds herself drawn back to the country of her birth. This is an account of how one person has tried to make sense of the past, of being formed by two cultures yet never completely belonging to either, of seeing the world from one point of view, but feeling the presence of another, like print coming through from the other side of the page. In the end, two decades after the Cultural Revolution, she takes us “home†again to a much more open China, where she comes to terms with the past and with her place between the two worlds she has known.
Posted: September 27th, 2017 | No Comments »
The Mapping of Asia
A collection of fine antique maps from 16th to 20th century
including a group of city plans and nautical charts

Geographical Section General Staff, Hong Kong and Part of the Leased Territory (1913) 1920
The exhibition continues until 28th October 2017
Wattis Fine Art Gallery
Posted: September 26th, 2017 | No Comments »
This article popped on Atlas Obscura up recently on the history of the US Armed Forces edition paperbacks distributed to military personnel during WW2 between 1943-1946. It’s an amazing story and worth a read…
I should also mention that Carl Crow’s Four Hundred Million Customers was selected as a US Armed Forces edition and specifically issued to all the GIs and sailors that liberated Shanghai and were stationed there for several years afterwards rebuilding the city, country and running the War Crimes Tribunals.
As far as I know Crow’s was the only China-related title in the series apart Alice Tisdale Hobart’s 1933 Oil for the Lamps of China…

Posted: September 20th, 2017 | 2 Comments »
The people at Bespoke Beijing and Penguin China have gotten together to organise another nighttime walking tour (the official one!) based on my book Midnight in Peking….contact them for tickets and to RSVP…

Posted: September 19th, 2017 | No Comments »
During the Sino-Japanese conflict in Shanghai in the summer and autumn of 1932 pictures were rushed to the newsreels to be shown as fast as possible at cinemas – such as this one in Honolulu, Hawaii
They advertised the newsreels as featuring ‘real battlefield scenes’. Several different newsreels covering Shanghai were running at different cinema chains in competition.
Posted: September 18th, 2017 | No Comments »
Sadly can’t be there, but do have an article in the Journal (the Lady Chatterley banned in Shanghai one noted below)…..
Launch of the newly published RAS China Journal

WHAT: Launch of the newly published RAS China Journal
WHEN: 7:30 PM – 9:00 PM Tuesday, September 26
WHERE: The Courtyard Institute, 28 Zhonglao Hutong (see map)
RSVP: email communications.ras.bj@gmail.com and write “journal” in the header. Please state name and number of people.
COST: free
Please join us on Tuesday, 26 September to celebrate the launch of the newly published Journal of The Royal Asiatic Society China, beginning 7.30 PM at The Courtyard Institute near Jingshan Park.
This latest edition of The Journal has 300 pages and 19 articles ranging from the censorship of Lady Chatterley in Shanghai to a history of rugby football in the Far East, from British diplomatic diaries during the 1900 Boxer siege to aspects of Chinese architecture, past and present. You’ll have a chance to meet RAS Journal Editor, Richard de Grijs, and some authors, and to mingle over wine and nibbles from Red Kitchen Cabinet .
Members in good standing — including those who join on the night — will receive a Journal free; others can purchase one for RMB 70.
You’ll also learn more about our program for the coming year. If you’ve enjoyed our activities, and always meant to join the Royal Asiatic Society Beijing, this is the time! Individual membership for the year costs RMB 300. Upcoming events will focus on a diverse range of topics, from the party congress to comparing Chinese and Western music to researching American aviators in WWII China.
We  hope to see you September 26. So that we have accurate numbers for catering, kindly RSVP to communications.ras.bj@gmail.com by Sept. 23.
