Mr. ShangkongShanghai lacks self-confidence in how it restricts news of Taiwan bookstore
By restricting news of the opening of an iconic Taiwanese bookstore in Shanghai Tower, how does the city expect to compete with Hong Kong?

I like Taipei. The city may not be as modern and fashionable as Hong Kong or Shanghai, but it has something that the other two cities may have already lost. The thing is called culture.
My friend Yan Fei, who has written two books about Hong Kong, once described today's Hong Kong as a big shopping mall. "The whole city is like a shopping mall. Wherever you go, it's all about brands and money," he said.
Then he asked me how I felt about my hometown Shanghai? Well, I think the city has been like a vast construction site for years, and one of many "next to-be-completed" big projects is the record-breaking 632-metre Shanghai Tower.
Last week, the Shanghai Tower, which is set to become the new icon for the city when it opens by 2015, caught my attention with good and bad news. The good news is the tower will get a special tenant - Taiwan's bookstore chain Eslite, already a cultural icon of the self-ruling island. Surprise?
Responding to news of the order, Eslite executives in Taipei said they would definitely obey mainland laws when launching the Shanghai branch, which clearly suggests that some books won't be on the shelves of Eslite's Shanghai branch when it opens in 2015.
Some media critics joked about Eslite's plan to open its Shanghai branch. "No surprise. Eslite Bookstore in Shanghai will be like just another Xinhua Bookstore in China," noted one commentator on Sina Weibo.
