Home
/
Non-Fiction
/
Restless Empire
Restless Empire
Oct 8, 2024 9:21 PM

Author:Odd Arne Westad

Restless Empire

Over the past 250 years of momentous change and dramatic upheaval, China has proved itself to be a Restless Empire.

Tracing China’s course from the eighteenth-century Qing Dynasty to today's People’s Republic, Restless Empire shows how the country’s worldview has evolved. It explains how Chinese attitudes have been determined by both receptiveness and resistance to outside influence and presents the preoccupations that have set its foreign-relations agenda.

Within two decades China is likely to depose the United States as the world’s largest economy. By then the country expects to have eradicated poverty among its population of more than one and a half billion, and established itself as the world’s technological powerhouse. Meanwhile, some – especially its neighbours – are afraid that China will strengthen its military might in order to bend others to its will.

A new form of Chinese nationalism is rising. Many Chinese are angry about perceived past injustices and fear a loss of identity to commercial forces and foreign influences. So, will China’s attraction to world society dwindle, or will China continue to engage? Will it attempt to recreate a Sino-centric international order in Eastern Asia, or pursue a more harmonious diplomatic route? And can it overcome its lack of democracy and transparency, or are these characteristics hard-wired into the Chinese system? Whatever the case, we ignore China’s international history at our peril.

Restless Empire is a magisterial and indispensible history of the most important state in world affairs today.

WINNER OF THE 2013 ASIA SOCIETY BERNARD SCHWARTZ BOOK AWARD

Reviews

Written by one of the most distinguished scholars on China, this book brings clarity and insight into complex historical issues

—— Jung Chang

Thorough, fast-moving, and consistently clear. Restless Empire gives an excellent introduction to the vagaries of China’s foreign relations over the last 250 years

—— Jonathan Spence, author of The Search for Modern China

An authoritative and lucid history of China’s foreign relations from the peak of the Qing dynasty in the eighteenth century to the present day. Anyone seeking to understand the role China may play in our future world should start with this book

—— Stephen R. Platt, author of Autumn in the Heavenly Kingdom

An essential guide to modern China’s often violent encounter with the rest of the world

—— Frank Dikotter, author of 'Mao’s Great Famine'

[a] truly excellent book…Andrea Wulf tell[s] the rip-roaring tales of numerous expeditions that set off around the globe to observe the Venusian transit of 1761…[She] communicate[s] the verve and energy – not to mention the perilous nature – of the expeditions.

—— Marcus Chown , New Scientist

Replete with meticulous detail, delightful illustrations and a cast of very familiar names from world history, Chasing Venus is an eminently readable account of humanity’s effort to chart the heavens. At once an exhilarating adventure, a tale of personal obsession, a tragedy and a detailed history of astronomical endeavour, Wulf’s latest work is a fascinating read.

—— Press Association

The result is a human story, and it’s worth reading as a rallying call to humanity’s quest to explore the universe simple for the sake of it.

—— Tom Payne , Telegraph

Andrea Wulf’s immaculately researched book describes the endeavours of the early scientific community to observe the transit around the world…an absorbing…exciting yarn.

—— The Lady

Chasing Venus is the entertaining tale of the expeditions that set off across the globe to use a transit of Venus to gain the first true measure of the size of the Solar System…[Wulf] write in a light, educational style that carries the story…Chasing Venus captures the spirit of adventure and the wonder at mankind’s new-found ability to understand the world around it…Chasing Venus is a pleasure to read from beginning to end.

—— Sky at Night Magazine

[A] thrilling, stirring tale, very well told, of global cooperation, and how the passion for Enlightenment triumphed against enormous odds.

—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian

[A] fine scientific history, full of interesting nuggets.

—— Sunday Telegraph

[a] thrilling book…an absorbing, even exciting yarn.

—— Independent

Sweeping historical epic about a daring young woman forced to make a hard choice in Stalinist Russia

—— OBSERVER TOP FIVE SUMMER READS OF 2008

Excellent... the historical detail is strong. The characterisation is superb, with Sashenka being especially well drawn. With her unwanted beauty and charisma, her gentle nobility that transcends class or wealth and her earnest ideals which eventually cost her so much. Sashenka commands out total sympathy, and when she is forced apart from her children, the sadness is profound and hard to dispel. A powerful novel... with a heroine who lingers in the mind when the story is finished

—— SPECTATOR

Sashenka is grand in scale, rich in historical research, and yet never loses the flow of an addictive, racy, well-wrought plot. It combines a moving, satisfyingly just-neat-enough finale with a warning - that history has an awful habit of repeating itself

—— THE SCOTSMAN

An epic novel... The suspense lasts until the final pages. There is no let-up. At the end of the book, you really feel that even though Sashenka is a fictional character, she has become one of the thousands of real people who haunt the Moscow archives that Montefiore knows so well

—— SUNDAY EXPRESS

Nicholas Shakespeare has employed all his superb gifts as a writer to tell the picaresque tale of his aunt in wartime occupied France. Priscilla is a femme fatale worthy of fiction, and the author traces her tangled, troubled, romantic and often tragically unromantic experiences through one of the most dreadful periods of 20th century history

—— Max Hastings

A thrilling story… an intimate family memoir, a story of survival and a quest for biographical truth

—— Sebastian Shakespeare , Tatler

[An] extraordinary true story of the author's aunt. A life of dark secrets, glamour, adventure and adversity during wartime.

—— Fanny Blake , Woman & Home

A tantalisingly original perspective of the Second World War…Shakespeare shines a moving, intriguing light on the moral quandaries faced by ordinary civilians

—— Robert Collins , Sunday Times

Priscilla is an unusual book, part biography, part family memoir, part detective story, but it reads like a novel and I found it impossible to put down. As an evocation of the period and the moral hypocrisy of the times, it could hardly be bettered (4 stars, Book of the Week)

—— Juliet Barker , Mail on Sunday

The novelist and biographer relates the extraordinary wartime derring-doings of his glamorous aunt, whose hidden past he discovered when he stumbled across a box of her papers. Glamorous and morally ambiguous, she married a French aristocrat, escaped from a PoW camp and at the liberation of Paris, was having a relationship with a mysterious man called “Otto”. Woven into her life story is a wealth of detail about life in Occupied France. Obvious appeal for fans of Agent Zigzag, Antony Beevor and Sebastian Faulks but also Suite Française. I was enthralled by it

—— Caroline Sanderson , The Bookseller

Assiduous archival research is blended with the flair and craft of an acclaimed novelist

—— Times Literary Supplement

A tender account of one woman's unpredictable, secretive and self-scarring wartime experiences... [Shakespeare is] a gifted novelist and biographer

—— Gaby Wood , Australian Financial Review

An excellently researched, beautifully written and unflinching memoir

—— Sarah Warwick , UK Press Syndication

Gripping

—— Jeremy Lewis , Literary Review

The incredible story of the author's aunt, a young English woman in France during the Nazi occupation

—— Lutyens & Rubinstein , Absolutely Notting Hill

Nicholas's research provides Priscilla with a full identity as a young, vulnerable woman whose heroism lay in being true to herself in terrifying times

—— Iain Finlayson , Saga

As both a biographer and novelist, [Shakespeare] is admirably placed to tell such a curious but utterly compelling story

—— Good Book Guide

A story as haunting and improbable as any of the fictions of Modiano... Gripping

—— Julian Jackson , Standpoint

This is both a family memoir and meticulously researched historical account of the dangerous world of Nazi-occupied France... Shakespeare perfectly captures the perilous and precarious atmosphere, and provides insight into the complexity of women's lives at that time

—— Alice Coke , Absolutely Fulham

A captivating travelogue.

—— Helena Gumley-Mason , Lady

A delightfully heady and beautifully written potpourri of a book.

—— BBC History Magazine

A fascinating look at the debt we owe to Roman achievements

—— Good Book Guide

A fascination exploration

—— Mail on Sunday

Highly readable but profoundly researched, The Trigger represents a bold exception to the deluge of First World War books devoted to mud, blood and poetry

—— Ben Macintyre , The Times

a fascinating original portrait of a man and his country

—— Country and Town House
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.zzdbook.com All Rights Reserved