Mao: The Unknown Story

the unknown story

832 pages

English language

Published June 2, 2005 by JONATHAN CAPE.

ISBN:
978-0-224-07126-0
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OCLC Number:
60576188

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4 stars (11 reviews)

Mao: The Unknown Story is a 2005 biography of Chinese Communist leader Mao Zedong (1893–1976) written by the husband-and-wife team of writers Jung Chang and historian Jon Halliday, who depict Mao as being responsible for more deaths in peacetime than Adolf Hitler or Joseph Stalin. In conducting their research for the book over the course of a decade, the authors interviewed hundreds of people who were close to Mao Zedong at some point in his life, used recently published memoirs from Chinese political figures, and explored newly opened archives in China and Russia. Chang herself lived through the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution, which she described in her earlier book, Wild Swans (1991). The book quickly became a best-seller in Europe and North America. It received overwhelming praise from reviews in national newspapers and also drew praise from some academics but mostly critical or mixed by others. Academic reviews from …

17 editions

Review of 'Mao: The Unknown Story' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

How to grab power as a hypocrite, recklessly. The commentary reveals the authors spent many years researching and talking to witnesses. However the portrait of Mao is pervasively one of incompetence, which does not explain how he could influence events as he did.
This text is a krass, and inundating account of 70 million people dying in peace time. Colossal ignorance and misgovernment are simply mind boggling.

I enjoyed Jung Chang's autobiographical book wild swans. This one was much more laborious to finish. However I come away knowing mich more about the 20th century and it's players.

Review of 'Mao: The Unknown Story' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Four stars means "liked it a lot" and yet I abandoned this book halfway through. How do those two thing fit together?

In the age of Facebook (or F**k, as I like to call it), the word "like" has come to mean something more vague and nebulous than it once did. I felt that this was an important book and I learned a great deal just getting about halfway through it. It was, however, unpleasant reading because of the sheer brutality and often needless suffering of the lives under discussion. I had escaped to this book from Mo Yan's [b:Frog|22522167|Frog|Mo Yan|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1403193908s/22522167.jpg|17258994] because the flippancy with which he handled some of the same themes. I needed less distance. But then I ended up needing more.

A character in The Three Body Problem [spoiler alert] faced with the Cultural Revolution decides that an alien race couldn't do a worse job …

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Subjects

  • Mao, Zedong, -- 1893-1976
  • Heads of state -- China -- Biography
  • China -- Politics and government -- 1949-