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Early 20th century French Indochina: a place where the cultures,
passions and blood of East and West mixed freely. In 1925, American
author Harry Hervey saw white men "sowing the legend of
Civilization in soil too fecund to resist any new growth,"
inspiring his most vivid novel. In a tale drunk with sensuous
beauty, irony and dark intensity, we experience the life of one
young girl-a congai-named Thi-Linh. Born of an Annamite mother and
French father, Thi-Linh-a creature of fragile beauty and savage
instinct-embodies the dreams, ambitions and future of Indochina,
where two disparate races struggled to become one. This expanded
modern edition features a provocative foreword by renowned travel
writer Pico Iyer; biographer Harlan Greene's author profile,
"Through a Woman's Eyes: Congai, Heroines & Harry Hervey";
supplemental articles and a bibliography of Hervey's complete
works. *** In his foreword, travel writer Pico Iyer comments:
"Hervey opened the door to the way we would be seeing Indochina-on
the page and in our heads-well into the 21st century. My deepest
astonishment came with seeing how much Congai anticipates perhaps
the greatest and most evergreen foreign novel about modern Vietnam,
The Quiet American, by Graham Greene. Almost ninety years later,
even in his wildest moments, Hervey caught something true that
those of us more than twice his age can only bow before."
Harry Hervey's lush account takes us on a quest for a lost Khmer
temple in 1925 French Indochina. Three stories march side-by-side
to the measure of his cadenced prose: the impact of French
colonialism on the Far East; the tale of the glorious Khmer
civilization; and the sensual, barbaric lives of the region's
people in another era. Renowned travel writer Pico Iyer opens with
a provocative foreword, then we join Hervey on his trek, now
lavishly illustrated with 140 vintage Indochina images by the
author and from historian Joel Montague. This expanded edition
features an extensive author profile: Harry Hervey: The Charmer
Behind the Cobra, by biographer Harlan Greene; a bibliography;
anthropologist Margaret Mead's 1928 review; and Hervey's gruesome
essay inspired by his Indochina voyage, The Lover of Madame
Guillotine. *** "King Cobra imparts all the tremendous excitement
of coming upon a hidden treasure in the jungles of Indochina. Once
I began to surrender to Hervey's spell, I started-as, perhaps, he
did-to lose all sense of where fact ended and fiction began." PICO
IYER "Hervey sees the jungle one moment as a vindictive monster,
the next as an annihilating river beneath which a whole
civilization drowns." MARGARET MEAD-1928 "A gripping biography of
that tawny courtesan Indochina-from her early amour with a race
from India, to her present liaison with France...." BOOK
JACKET-1927
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
WHERE STRANGE GODS CALL PAGES OUT OF THE EAST BY HARRY HERVEY WITH
ILLUSTRATIONS BY CHRISTOPHER MURPHY Ever beyond a far. brown
turning, Where the road falls, la the hearts desire. . . . A god
calls. . . . R. S. ANDREWS. We be the gods of the East, Older than
all Masters of mourning and feast How ahall we tall Will they gape
to the husks that ye proffer, And yearn to your sonel And wo, have
we nothing to offer, Who rulad them so long In the fume of the
incense, the clash of the cymbal, the blare of the conch and tho
gong BTTDTABD THE CENTURY CO. New York London FOR FRED, ANN,
HARRIETT, KIT AND LEILA I UNFOLD THIS PEACOCK FAN OF MEMORY
CONTENTS CHAPTER PAOT I MID-PACIFIC 3 II PIKE ISLAND 8 III TICK
BEAT OK DRUMS 26 IV THE KINGDOM. OF CLATTERING SHOES . . 41 V THE
SILKEN DRAGON 43 VI SHINTO THE WAI OF THE GODS ... 73 VII MA AME
BKANCH-OF-LOVE 89 VIII TUB HBAVKNLY CITY 119 IX I WALK WITH LOTI A
MOOD AT NAGASAKI 148 X IMPERIAL YELLOW 157 XI THE CITY OF SOMBER
FACES CANTONESE FRAGMENTS 204 XII ZAMBOANGA 233 XIII THE COXJNTEY
OF CONRAD 259 XIV ADVENTURE AN INTERLUDE BETWEEN SHIPS 306 XV A MAN
IN SAVPRON 317 XVI TKK BLUE ROAD 346 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Sitting
in golden shrines, calling . . Frontispiece 3TAC1NQ PAGE The drums
of the surf pounding in blow-holes along the coast 20 Diamond Head,
Honolulu 29 I found myself marveling at the almost sedate manner in
which she went through the dance 36 The Kingdom of Clattering Shoes
45 The Procession of the Courtezans 56 U 0n spring days, on her
high black-lacquered clogs, she would parade the streets with her
maid . G8 C A granite torii, sufficiently huge to be consistent
with the immensity of the natural surround ings 77 Shinto Festival
at Nikko 84A street brilliant with banners of white and scarlet 93
The Japan of Madame Chrysanthhnc . . 112 She dances with quaint
little gestures gentle as April rain - . - 129 A Kioto tomplc 136
Tho high priori, in brocades of crimson and gold 144 At Nagasaki -
. CM, 152 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS The harbour lay like a brilliant
green arena in an amphitheater of encircling mountains . . 161 The
tremulous heart of the native town . . . 176 Past gilded,
vermilioned theaters and gambling houses moved sleepy-eyed beings 3
. . . 193 Rain in Canton 208 The Flower Boats lashed together,
elaborately carved and gilded 216 Ugly, ramshackle dwellings and
godowns sam pans, junks and lighters 225 Endless rows of shops and
dwellings . . 228 Zamboanga 237 A church in Intramuros 257 The
hotel, a series of blanched, red-roofed build ings 272 Javanese
Actors 280 Hidden in reaches of luminous green were ponds and
little streams 305 Singapore 312 She fluttered about the improvised
stage like a drunken hummingbird 320 The mighty paya, or dome of
the pagoda, flung itself nearly four hundred feet into the air 324
A lumber yard where mottled gray monsters were dragging logs or
tossing their trunks de fiantly 333 A Shrine in the Shw Dagon
Pagoda . . . . 336 WHERE STRANGE GODS CALL,
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