Treason by the Book by Jonathan D. Spence

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: February 2001
  • 336pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 2001
    • Publisher: Viking Adult
    • Format: Hardcover, 336pp

    Synopsis

    Shortly before noon on October 28, 1728, General Yue Zhongqi, the most powerful military and civilian official in northwest China, was en route to his headquarters. Suddenly, out of the crowd, a stranger ran toward Yue and passed him an envelope-an envelope containing details of a treasonous plot to overthrow the Manchu government.

    This thrilling story of a conspiracy against the Qing dynasty in 1728 is a captivating tale of intrigue and a fascinating exploration of what it means to rule and be ruled. Once again, Jonathan Spence has created a vivid portrait of the rich culture that surrounds a most dramatic moment in Chinese history.

    "An infectiously readable narrative . . . on a par with bestselling works of historical reconstruction such as Dava Sobel's Longitude . . . Eighteenth-century China springs to life." (The Dallas Morning News)

    "A slice of history told in the lively manner of a novel." (Ian Buruma, The New York Times Book Review)

    "A work of history that pulses with emotion, with vital characters re-created vividly, with complex situations lucidly unraveled, with irony underscored. His straightforward prose style and use of the historic present give his work an engrossing immediacy. It is history of the best kind." (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

    New York Review of Books

    ...Jonathan Spence...once again applies his exceptional skills as a document-hunter, historian, and storyteller.

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    Biography

    Jonathan D. Spence is Sterling Professor of history at Yale University and has written twelve books on Chinese history. He has been awarded a Guggenheim and a MacArthur Fellowship, among many other awards

    Customer Reviews

    Excellent history of an attempted coup in ancient Chinaby LeongWaiHong

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    May 25, 2009: Rumours as a source of evil has always bedevilled mankind. As early as the 18 th-century China , 14 Dec 1728 to be precise, General Yue Zhongqi concluding his report on an interrogation of a prisoner to Emperor Yongzheng reflected on the way rumours spread in general :

    One person said something ,someone else misheard it and repeated it, someone heard the new version for the first time and believed it to be true.

    A good recent example , Yue observed, was the rumours swirling around that the current emperor was a heavy drinker, ... an initial statement by a senior official ...that the emperor now found wine bad for his health, had been transformed by the rumour mill into the fact that the emperor drink immoderately.

    -extract from `Treason by the book' by Jonathan Spence 2001 Penguin edition page 79. An interesting read on the astonishing true story of a plot to overthrow the Manchurian Emperor in 1728. A lot of fascinating insight into the mind of a Confucian ruler.

    The book is a revelation. It shows :-

    a) how hardworking was Emperor Yongzheng,

    b) how even in early 18th century the Chinese officials can trace a rumour to a group of prisoners in a chain gang seen on a certain road at a certain time several years earlier, and then check the files to locate and interrogate every single suspect,

    c) how Emperor Yongzheng struggled with the critical questions ,"What is a good ruler? " "What is the law ?"

    Yongzheng has always been overlooked by historians who highlighted the achievements of his father and his son. A book that to a certain degree redeems Yongzheng's reputation is this book.Jonathan Spence has written an outstanding history book.

    I Also Recommend: Chiang Kai Shek.

    A wonderful bookby Anonymous

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    September 19, 2006: This is a wonderful book. One will be hard put to find a better book on how a Ching Emperor governs China. Brilliantly written .It reads more like a thriller than a real life story it is.


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