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Wild Swans
(By: Jung Chang, Amazon.com, 2006-06-29)
In
Wild Swans Jung Chang recounts the evocative, unsettling, and insistently
gripping story of how three generations of women in her
family fared in the political maelstrom of China during the
20th century. Chang's grandmother was a warlord's concubine. Her gently
raised mother struggled with hardships in the early days of
Mao's revolution and rose, like her husband, to a prominent
position in the Communist Party before being denounced during the
Cultural Revolution. Chang herself marched, worked, and breathed for Mao
until doubt crept in over the excesses of his policies
and purges. Born just a few decades apart, their lives
overlap with the end of the warlords' regime and overthrow
of the Japanese occupation, violent struggles between the Kuomintang and
the Communists to carve up China, and, most poignant for
the author, the vicious cycle of purges orchestrated by Chairman
Mao that discredited and crushed millions of people, including her
parents.
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