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THE NEW CHINA PLAYBOOK

BEYOND SOCIALISM AND CAPITALISM

Mixing research with personal experience, Jin offers critical insights about the future of China and its global impact.

A respected academic provides a nuanced examination of China’s past, present, and future.

China has always been difficult for many Westerners to understand, but the issue has become increasingly crucial as the country’s global role has grown. Jin, who grew up in China and retains strong connections there, was educated in the U.S. and is now a professor at the London School of Economics. With this background, she is well qualified to play the role of cultural interpreter. She has a special interest in the problems now emerging in China as the society struggles to move from an unremitting focus on economic growth to quality-of-life and equity issues. Jin notes that China’s transition from an impoverished, rural country to a wealthy, urbanized society has been remarkably fast. The private sector has driven the growth, especially in the past two decades, but the government remains firmly in control, with a complex system of incentives, rules, easy credit, and government-owned enterprises. The author traces key policies since the time of Deng, and she delves into the impact of the “one-child policy,” an area often overlooked by armchair commentators. For the most part, the Chinese people are willing to accept government direction, including a high degree of personal surveillance and intervention in their lives. They value security over freedom and generally believe that China requires a powerful central authority. Significantly, the younger generation is in many ways more conservative than their parents despite their taste for Western brands and lifestyles. Jin acknowledges China’s incredible progress but wonders what the future holds. “China’s central leadership, which spurred the most successful economic growth story of our time, could also make choices that might have the opposite effect in the future,” she concludes. “The power of the state provides the system’s greatest potential and also poses its gravest inherent risk.”

Mixing research with personal experience, Jin offers critical insights about the future of China and its global impact.

Pub Date: May 16, 2023

ISBN: 9781984878281

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: March 2, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2023

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THE GREATEST EVIL IS WAR

A book of predictable hectoring—a far cry from the author’s best work.

A plangent diatribe against war.

In his latest, Hedges argues that “preemptive war is a war crime,” including in the Ukraine, but the West made Russia do it by extending NATO into Eastern Europe, so that “Russia has every right to feel threatened, betrayed, and angry.” And because Russian was the primary language of most Crimeans, why should Russia not have annexed the peninsula? The author’s condition-tinged discussion—which simultaneously damns and excuses the war in Ukraine—soon grows tiresome, especially because Hedges does not extend the same “yes, but” privilege to, say, Germany in its invasion of German-speaking Sudetenland or the U.S. in its invasion of Iraq. While excoriating the Biden administration for being stocked with presumed nationalists such as Anthony Blinken and Kimberly Kagan (the latter’s crime being, apparently, that she founded a think tank that studies war), Hedges writes, “When an enemy can’t be found, an enemy is manufactured. Putin has become…the new Hitler, out to grab Ukraine and the rest of Central and Eastern Europe.” Is Putin an invented foe? That seems a dividing-line question: If you answer in the affirmative, you’ll likely keep reading, and if not, not. A noted leftist critic, Hedges was a contributor to the now-shuttered Russian TV channel RT America, which may explain the rationalizations, against which his concluding prayer that we see “an end to war before we stumble into a nuclear holocaust that devours us all” seems halfhearted—particularly when it’s preceded by a call for a moratorium on arms shipments to Ukraine. Elsewhere, Hedges rehearses the usual charges, few surprising: War is bad because civilians get hurt, soldiers are scarred (“The worst trauma is often caused not by what combat veterans witnessed but by what they did”), corporations become rich, and so on.

A book of predictable hectoring—a far cry from the author’s best work.

Pub Date: Aug. 23, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-64421-293-6

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Seven Stories

Review Posted Online: May 16, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2022

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I AM A GIRL FROM AFRICA

An inspiring narrative that will be especially valuable to young people seeking to work for humanitarian causes.

A moving account of a determined young woman’s journey from poverty to humanitarian activism.

Raised by a generous, wise grandmother in Zimbabwe, Nyamayaro came of age in a time of withering heat. “There is no cool or comfortable place to hide,” she writes on the first page of her memoir. “The leaves of the tree are long gone, and with it the shade, burned away by the punishing drought that has descended on our small village.” The ensuing famine meant widespread death, but she was kept from starvation by the ministrations of U.N. aid workers. She was determined to become an aid worker herself. In 2000, at the age of 25, she moved to London, where an Irishwoman she met in a hostel dubbed her “Girl from Africa.” Nyamayaro, who returned the favor by dubbing the woman “Tiny Nose,” didn’t mind the sobriquet: “The fact that I’m African is all that matters, and that is enough. I am after all Mwana Wehvu—a child of the African soil.” Scraping to survive, finally finding work as a janitor, she talked her way into a volunteer position at a humanitarian agency and began to take on projects of increasing importance—e.g., developing responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic sweeping her native country and working to help the government of the nation of Georgia to maintain a health insurance program for impoverished communities. Leading a team to combat maternal mortality in childbirth, Nyamayaro became increasingly aware of the scarcity of resources as well as the pervasiveness of gender inequality. “Why is it that despite all the progress made by the women’s rights movement,” she asks, “no country or company or institution in the world can yet claim to have achieved gender equality?” Throughout this memorable account of her impressive life, the author recalls “the central, definitive African value and philosophy of ubuntu: that when we uplift others, we are ourselves uplifted.”

An inspiring narrative that will be especially valuable to young people seeking to work for humanitarian causes.

Pub Date: April 20, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-982113-01-8

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Scribner

Review Posted Online: Feb. 7, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2021

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