Biography & Autobiography Personal Memoirs
Barbarian Lost
Travels in the New China
- Publisher
- HarperCollins
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2016
- Category
- Personal Memoirs, Essays & Travelogues, China
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781443441421
- Publish Date
- Sep 2016
- List Price
- $11.99
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9781443441407
- Publish Date
- Sep 2016
- List Price
- $33.99
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781443441414
- Publish Date
- Sep 2017
- List Price
- $19.99
-
CD-Audio
- ISBN
- 9781543660715
- Publish Date
- Oct 2017
- List Price
- $21.99
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Description
The number one national bestseller and a Hill-Times Best Book of the Year
To this day, China remains an enigma. Ancient, complex and fast moving, it defies easy understanding.
Ever since he was a boy, Alexandre Trudeau has been fascinated by this great county. Recounting his experiences in the China of recent years, Trudeau visits artists and migrant workers, townspeople and rural farmers. Often accompanied by a young Chinese journalist, Vivien, he explores realities caught in time between the China of our memories and the thrust of progress. The China he seeks out lurks in hints and shadows. It flickers dimly amidst all the glare and noise. The people he encounters along the way give up but small secrets yet each revelation comes as a surprise that jolts us from our preconceived ideas and forces us to challenge our most secure notions.
Barbarian Lost, Trudeau’s first book, is an insightful and witty account of the dynamic changes going on right now in China, as well as a look back into the deeper history of this highly codified society. On the ground with the women and men who make China tick, Trudeau shines new light on the country as only a traveller with his storytelling abilities could.
About the author
Alexandre Trudeau is a filmmaker, journalist, traveller and storyteller. Over the past decade and a half, his films and reports on issues of geopolitical importance have been seen and read by millions of Canadians. Trudeau was a trusted witness on the ground as the bombs brought shock and awe to Baghdad. He charted out the intimate realities on both sides of the Israeli security barrier, explored the pluralism of Canadian identity, stood up for the rights of arbitrarily imprisoned terror suspects in Canada, tracked youth-driven democratic awakenings in the Balkans, shed light on the origins of unrest in Darfur, Liberia and Haiti and deconstructed the Canadian peace-keeping legacy fifty years after Pearson’s Nobel. Born into one of the country’s most prominent political families, Alexandre has been familiar to Canadians since birth by his nickname, Sacha. Trudeau lives in Montreal with his wife and three young children.
Editorial Reviews
“Alexandre Trudeau has a keen eye for contradiction, a novelist’s gift for dialogue, and a fly-on-the-wall detachment that is both austere and engrossing. At turns provocative, hilarious and moving, this book is a must-read for all Canadians.”
Robert Wright, author of <em>Our Man in Tehran</em>
“A soulful, honest exploration of the endless enigma that China offers all its visitors. . . . But it is the honesty and humility in sketching his own journey that transcends this traveller’s tale and what makes the book so compelling.”
John Fraser, author of <em>The Chinese: Portrait of a People</em> and <em>Stolen China</em>
“A fascinating, deeply compelling and thought-provoking glimpse of the China so many seek to comprehend. This articulate, erudite and most experienced traveller spares neither his subject nor himself . . . An eminently readable and highly entertaining sojourn.”
Robert R. Fowler, author of <em>A Season in Hell</em>
“An insightful and witty account of the dynamic changes going on right now in China.”
CBC Books
“Alexandre Trudeau’s book adds useful meaning to [the] raging debate over China’s future.”
<em>Toronto Star</em>
“An on-the-ground, agenda-free enquiry into a place that does not reveal its essence easily.”
<em>Montreal Gazette</em>
“With a journalist’s curiosity and a novelist’s eloquence, Alexandre Trudeau paints a fascinating portrait of a new China struggling to be born. Barbarian Lost is at times funny, insightful, and unsettling.”
Mellissa Fung, author of <em>Under an Afghan Sky</em>