Matt Schiavenza From the Dragon to the Apple- A Sinophile in New York

29Dec/091

The Year in Review- Books and Web

My next series of posts will be an attempt to wrap things up, and since the variety of topics covered in this blog reflect my own idiosyncratic style I've decided to split up these reviews into categories. I hope you enjoy them.

In our first installment I've presented my choices for the best books and websites of the year. Caveat lector: if I didn't read it or surf it, it isn't on this list. What's more, not all of these items were new in 2009- just new to me.

Books

1. The Great War for Civilization: The Conquest of the Middle East by Robert Fisk.

Earlier in the decade, when neoconservative self-congratulation reached its apex and critics of Bush's foreign policy were routinely labeled traitors, the surname of this great journalist was transformed into a pejorative verb; to fisk someone meant to lambaste a piece of writing, line by line, usually in blog-form.

Here Fisk shows why the neo-conservatives, as they were about everything else, were deadly wrong. In a monumental tome exceeding 1,300 pages, Fisk recounts a history of the world's most volatile region beginning in the mid 1970s- the date of his appointment as a reporter there for The Times of London- to the present day.

Fisk tells of each event in mind-searing, moving detail: the Iranian revolution of 1979, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the Iran-Iraq War, the enduring Israeli occupation of Palestine, the two Iraq War, the Algerian civil war, and the 2001 US invasion of Afghanistan.

The Middle East, once the cradle of civilization, has endured violence, tragedy, and tyranny on an almost unimaginable scale. Fisk imbues this history with a bravery and honesty so often absent in current reportage in our newspapers, magazines, and television programs.

2. The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolano

Meet the visceral realists Arturo Belano and Ulises Lima- one Chilean and the other Mexican, together they form the heart of a poetry movement that will redefine Latin American literature- or will it? The Savage Detectives tells the story of the two poets through the people that have known them, in both diary and oral history format. Belano and Lima eventually leave Mexico and travel the world, working as night watchmen in Spanish camping grounds or squatting in Tel Aviv apartments, living a literary life without the attendant glory.

Belano (the author) writes with passion and skill about a literary movement, real or imagined, as it evolves through the last three decades of the 20th century. I confess that prior to reading The Savage Detectives I thought discussions of Latin literature concerned only Marquez and Borges. How wrong was I.

3. The Post-American World by Fareed Zakaria

Less than twenty years ago, as the Soviet Union collapsed and the United States claimed victory in the Cold War, many scholars predicted that an era of pax America was upon us. The events of September 11th a decade later threw a bucket of cold water on that idea, and the War of Terror has illustrated just how limited America's ability to meet its goals in global affairs.

What will be the big idea of our current century? Fareed Zakaria posits that American global hegemony will be challenged by what he terms 'the rise of the rest'. Countries such as China, India, and Brazil will see their influence and power grow alongside their economies, and will provide a counterbalance to American ideas of global leadership.

Zakaria, whose foreign affairs columns in Newsweek magazine have been favorites of mine for years, writes persuasively that these changes are not only inevitable but also, most likely, positive- not to mention of far more international significance than our current battle against terrorism appears to be.

4. Out of Mao's Shadow by Philip Pan

The subjects Pan covers in his book- the Hundred Flowers Movement, the Cultural Revolution, official corruption, land speculation, and the news media- are well-trodden ground to anyone with an interest in modern Chinese history. Yet Pan's approach to his subjects are what set Out of Mao's Shadow apart from the dozens of other books published by Western journalists based in China.

Pan profiles Chinese determined to preserve the memory of people, places and events scrubbed clean by party-sanctioned history books. His subjects are mainly ordinary people driven by extreme circumstance to secure a measure of justice, often in the face of great personal danger.

Pan doesn't have an editorial opinion in his pages. He hasn't staked a claim as a Sinoskeptic or a Sinophile, merely as a very good reporter able to see the human face of the world's most remarkable economic growth story.

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