The Penguin History of Modern China
by Jonathan Fenby
Allen Lane, HK$480
She was 17 and had been heard to remark that American-made shoe polish was really good. But this was in China in 1957 and Mao Zedong had deemed it politically expedient to put an end to the Hundred Flowers campaign, which had initially invited criticism of the Communist Party. Deng Xiaoping was charged with purging the 'rightists' - 'squeezing the pus from the abscess'.
The nameless teenaged shoe-shiner was one of an estimated 400,000 'intellectuals' targeted and she was deported to a labour camp in Manchuria.
Jonathan Fenby does not record this hapless girl's fate, but her plight is symptomatic of the apocalypse that overtook the mainland for much of the 20th century. This single example is also characteristic of his history of modern China, which places the key events of the past century and a half into a broad, flowing narrative that is at once gripping and illuminating, yet is spiced with anecdotes and sketches that bring the book to life and raise some interesting questions.