34,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Gebundenes Buch

They brought the printing press and telescopes, religious fervor and medical innovations, they advised the monarchs and then based their operations there for a controversial war. Americans in Thailand is the story of one of the world's most fascinating foreign communities. Beginning with the first American to step foot on Siamese soil in the early 1800's and covering the growth of the community from the early traders and missionaries through the Vietnam-war era, the illustrated title explores the colorful and compelling impact Americans have had on this Southeast Nation.

Produktbeschreibung
They brought the printing press and telescopes, religious fervor and medical innovations, they advised the monarchs and then based their operations there for a controversial war. Americans in Thailand is the story of one of the world's most fascinating foreign communities. Beginning with the first American to step foot on Siamese soil in the early 1800's and covering the growth of the community from the early traders and missionaries through the Vietnam-war era, the illustrated title explores the colorful and compelling impact Americans have had on this Southeast Nation.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Denis Gray took up an assignment as chief of bureau of the Associated Press in Bangkok after being forced to flee the 1975 communist victories in Indochina and never left Thailand. In between he has covered more than a dozen wars, and everything from the Olympic Games to Hollywood stars in more than 40 countries Apart from the AP, his writings have appeared in some of the world's top magazines. Born in Czechoslovakia, he fled his homeland as a child, was educated at Yale University and served as an army officer during the Vietnam War. Denis splits his time between Bangkok and a house in the hills of Chiang Mai. Nicholas Grossman has been an American in Thailand since 2002, having arrived from his hometown of Boston to co-author a new travel guide on the country for Let's Go Publications. For several years after, he worked at the Bangkok Post and as the features editor of the International Herald Tribune's supplement ThaiDay. In 2006, he joined the editorial team of EDM's Thailand: Nine Days in the Kingdom multimedia project as a writer and editor, after which he joined the publisher fulltime.He was the editor of Chronicle of Thailand, King Bhumibol Adulyadej: A Life's Work and 7 Days in Myanmar. He has never take any inordinate pride in his alma mater, Harvard University, but he was impressed by how many of its graduates feature in this book. He lives in Bangkok with his wife Atty, twin daughters Esme and Frieda, and a beagle and shih Tzu. Jim Algie's first exposures to Asian culture were donning a ludicrous costume to play one of the Oriental dances in a school Christmas pageant version of The Nutcracker Suite, and watching his brother do impersonations of Bruce Lee's martial arts maneuvers. After a 10-year career as a punk rock musician he turned his university studies as a literature and creative writing student, combined with work experience as a music critic and fiction author, into a full-time wordsmith career in Thailand. As a 22-year resident of Bangkok, he has published more than 500 feature stories around the world while his books include the acclaimed nonfiction collection, Bizarre Thailand: Tales of Crime, Sex and Black Magic (2010) and a short fiction collection of prize-snagging tales, The Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand (2014).