Synopses & Reviews
In Shadows and Wind, Robert Templer paints a fascinating and fresh picture of a country usually viewed with hazy nostalgia or deep suspicion. Here is Hanoi, an increasingly tense and troubled city approaching its millennium but uncertain of its direction. Here are people emerging from a long wilderness of malnutrition, discovering a new lifestyle of leisure and luxury. And everywhere are the anomalies that burst the bubble of optimism: a vastly expensive luxury hotel sitting empty in an unknown town six hours from an international airport; museums crammed with fake exhibits. And there remains the one-party Communist state, still wrapped in secrecy and corruption, and making for an uneasy bedfellow with the rapacious capitalism it now encourages. Drawing on hundreds of interviews in Vietnam and years of research, Robert Templer has produced the first in-depth examination of the problems facing modern Vietnam. Shadows and Wind is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the Vietnam that now has emerged from a century of conflict with both foreign powers and with itself.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [360]-364) and index.
About the Author
After graduating from Cambridge University Robert Templer worked in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Afghanistan. A regular contributor to the Guardian and Sunday Telegraph (London), he is a recipient of the prestigious Soros Fellowship and now teaches at the University of California at Berkeley.
Table of Contents
Map
Acknowledgments
1. Without Heroes
2. Imagining Vietnam
3. Remembering Vietnam
4. Famine
5. Feast
6. Empty Box
7. Excommunicated
8. Industrial Chickens
9. Pendulum
10. Cymbals and Litanies
11. A Mirror of Things Past
12. Social Evils
13. Faith
14. China Lite
15. Melancholy Tribe
16. Young and Restless
17. Conclusion
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index