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The downfall of Bo Xilai in China was more than a darkly thrilling mystery. It revealed a cataclysmic internal power struggle between Communist Party factions, one that reached all the way to China's new president Xi Jinping.The scandalous story of the corruption of the Bo Xilai family,the murder of British businessman Neil Heywood Bo's secret lovers the secret maneuverings of Bo's supporters the hasty trial and sentencing of Gu Kailai, Bo's wife,was just the first rumble of a seismic power struggle that continues to rock the very foundation of China's all-powerful Communist Party. By the time it is over, the machinations in Beijing and throughout the country that began with Bo's fall could affect China's economic development and disrupt the world's political and economic order.Pin Ho and Wenguang Huang have pieced together the details of this fascinating political drama from firsthand reporting and an unrivaled array of sources, some very high in the Chinese government. This was the first scandal in China to play out in the international media,details were leaked, sometimes invented, to non-Chinese news outlets as part of the power plays that rippled through the government. The attempt to manipulate the Western media, especially, was a fundamental dimension to the story, and one that affected some of the early reporting. A Death in the Lucky Holiday Hotel returns to the scene of the crime and shows not only what happened in Room 1605 but how the threat of the story was every bit as important in the life and death struggle for power that followed. It touched celebrities and billionaires and redrew the cast of the new leadership of the Communist Party. The ghost of Neil Heywood haunts China to this day.
A "Washington Post" Best of 2012 pick
In this vivid, humorous autobiography, Wenguang Huang recounts his coming of age in the 1970s in Xi'an, in central China, during the country's Cultural Revolution. When he was nine years old, his grandmother became obsessed with her own death and with the funeral rites that would grant her eternal peace. Terrified by the thought of cremation--obligatory in communist China--she made her family promise to bury her in her native village. Huang's father gathered what little savings he had and built a coffin, appointing Huang, his oldest son, as coffin keeper--a responsibility that meant, among other things, sleeping next to the coffin at night. Over the next 20 years, even as profound social and political changes gripped the country, the Huang family diligently planned the funeral. In this memoir of the last three decades of the 20th century, Huang, a translator and journalist who ultimately immigrated to the United States, paints a portrait of a society caught between ancient traditions and a radical push for modernization of the Maoist regime. As he recounts his own family's story, Huang offers illuminating insights into the contradictions that make up modern China.
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