Catalogue > Biographies
Chinese Whispers
A Journey Into Betrayal
Jan Wong
During the Cultural Revolution Jan Wong studied in Beijing and reported a fellow student to the authorities. Over thirty years later, she returned to China to find out what happened to the woman she betrayed. Chinese Whispers tells her remarkable story.
'Wong points the way for the future of travel writing.' Book of the Week, The Times
In 1972, Jan Wong became one of only two Westerners admitted to Beijing University at the height of the Cultural Revolution. One day, a student, Yin Luoyi, sought Jan’s assistance in going to the United States. Wong, then a starry-eyed Maoist, reported Yin to the authorities. Yin promptly disappeared.
Now, thirty-three years later, Wong returns to Beijing to search for the woman who has haunted her conscience. She hopes to apologise, perhaps somehow to try to make amends. At the very least, she wants to find out whether Yin has survived. Preoccupied by the past, fascinated by China's present and future, Jan Wong searches out old friends, foes and comrades in this half-familiar city, finally uncovering the truth about the woman she wronged. Chinese Whispers tells a unique and unforgettable story of communism and capitalism, of guilt and atonement, of remembering and forgetting.
Amazing reviews on first publication:
'Chinese Whispers sits alongside The Search for the Panchen Lama by Isabel Hilton, and The Perfect Storm by Sebastian Junger.' Book of the Week, The Times
'Wong is a beautiful writer... Her tale of trying to find Yin is not just the story of a search for an old acquaintance, but also an insight into how China is dealing with its own past... Gripping and entertaining.' Rosie Blau, Financial Times
'Funny and irreverent... The candid, beguiling style is hugely entertaining' Irish Times
'A witty, clever and knowingly light-hearted take on betrayal and redemption; a feel-good penance.' Daily Mail
About the author
Jan Wong is a third-generation Canadian, born and raised in Montreal. She was the acclaimed Toronto Globe and Mail's Beijing correspondent for the from 1988 to 1994. A graduate of McGill University, Beijing University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, her first book, Red China Blues: My Long March From Mao to Now, was named one of Time magazine’s top ten books of 1996. She lives in Toronto.
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Paperback
Published February 2010
336 pages
ISBN: 978 1 84354 975 8
RRP: £8.99