AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to millions of articles from top publications available through your library.

BECOMING MADAME MAO.(Review)(Brief Article)

Publishers Weekly

| April 03, 2000 | (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Anchee Min. Houghton Mifflin, $25 (352p) ISBN 0-618-00407-6

* Historical fiction acquires new luster and credibility in Min's brilliant evocation of the woman who married Mao and fought to succeed him. As she proved in her memoir, Red Azalea, Min is a forceful writer, but her first novel, Katherine, did not prepare us for the highly dramatic, psychologically penetrating and provocative narrative she presents here. A girl called Ynhe is born to a rural concubine in 1919; she renames herself Lan Ping when, in 1934, she runs away to Shanghai with ambitions to be an actress, and later joins the Red Army; and finally, she is dubbed Jiang Ching by the man she marries, Mao …

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Becoming Madame Mao.(Review)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Library Journal Quan, Shirley N. March 15, 2000 700+ words
Madame Mao.(Theater Review)
Magazine article from: Variety Young, Allen August 25, 2003 700+ words
New opera `Madame Mao' melds ambition, revenge and sex.
News wire article from: Detroit Free Press (Detroit, MI) July 29, 2003 700+ words
Anchee Min After the Revolution.(new book "Becoming Madame Mao")
Magazine article from: Publishers Weekly Farmanfarmaian, Roxane June 5, 2000 700+ words
Madame Mao in the desert: Michael Kennedy visits Glimmerglass and Santa Fe...
Magazine article from: The Spectator Kennedy, Michael August 23, 2003 700+ words
©2013 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions

The AccessMyLibrary advertising network includes: womensforum.com GlamFamily