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Unexpectedly in 1958, an irreverent British journalist and Australian cartoonist duo were granted visas to visit Communist China at its most closed and inscrutable. They went, the saw, and they produced one of the great classics of China books, Willow Pattern Walkabout, a unique and sadly forgotten book, now resurrected. Emerging from the writings of Edward "Bernie" Kirwan Ward and the drawings of Paul Rigby, both residents of Perth in Australia, is a picture of China at a key moment in its history, still feeding off the exhilaration of the creation of "People's China" in 1949, and full of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Unexpectedly in 1958, an irreverent British journalist and Australian cartoonist duo were granted visas to visit Communist China at its most closed and inscrutable. They went, the saw, and they produced one of the great classics of China books, Willow Pattern Walkabout, a unique and sadly forgotten book, now resurrected. Emerging from the writings of Edward "Bernie" Kirwan Ward and the drawings of Paul Rigby, both residents of Perth in Australia, is a picture of China at a key moment in its history, still feeding off the exhilaration of the creation of "People's China" in 1949, and full of optimism and blind idealism. The two traveled on a path through the "New China" that was micromanaged by the communist authorities, but they still harvested a rich collection of insights and observations tinged with skepticism and good humor.
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Autorenporträt
Kirwan Ward was an English journalist who worked for the West Australian Newspaper. He is the author of From Birthright to Birthmark. Paul Rigby was an award-winning Australian cartoonist. He is best known for his work for the New York Post, the Sun, and the Sydney Daily Mirror. Graham Earnshaw is a writer and businessman who began his career in China as a journalist. He is the author of The Great Walk of China, Life and Death of a Dotcom in China, and Tales of Old Shanghai.