June 2008

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Beijing Temple Fair

  • Photos Taken at the Changdian Temple Fair in Beijing, February 2007.

November in Ningxia

  • Photos taken on my trip to Yinchuan and Guyuan, November 2006.

Guyuan, China

  • Check it Out
    These are photos taken on my recent trip to Guyuan, Ningxia.

Cherry Blossom Festival

  • DSC_0062
    A park near my house had a cherry blossom festival today. I spent an hour or so there this afternoon with my camera. Enjoy.

Terra-cotta Warriors

  • Xian_2006_072_small
    Photos taken of the Terra-cotta Warriors, near Xi'an, China. These figures were cast and buried around 200BC, and were undiscoverd until 1974.

Saturday in the Park

  • Dsc_0034_small
    Photos taken in and around a Beijing park on an early spring Saturday.

Cambodia 2006

  • Looking Out to Sea
    Photos taken during my visit to Cambodia in January.

Kashgar

  • Double Wide Yurt
    An album of photos taken in and around Kashgar.

To Xanadu

  • Recitation
    A selection of photos taken on our trip from Beijing to Xanadu, October 4-6, 2005.

Neighborhood Stroll

  • Pensive Child
    This is an album of photos of various people and scenes that I pass daily as I walk or ride my bike between where I live and where I work.

National Day 2005

  • Catholic Church on Wangfujing
    These pictures were taken in an old "Hutong" section of Beijing, and on Beijing's main shopping street on National Day 2005 (October 1).
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May 07, 2008

A Must-Read Article

The cover story in this month's National Geographic is about China.  The article, titled "Inside the Dragon" was written by Peter Hessler, one of my favorite writers about China. He always seems to be writing the articles and books that I wish I were writing!  Here's a teaser:

Perhaps this awareness of a painful history was also why the 1990s turned out differently. It became modern China's first decade without a major upheaval, and thus far the 21st century has also been peaceful. And yet despite the lack of political change, the nation has been radically transformed. For three decades the economy has grown at an average annual rate of nearly 10 percent, and more people have been lifted out of poverty than in any other country, at any other time. China has become home to the largest urbanization in human history—an estimated 150 million people have left the countryside, mostly to work in the factory towns of the coast. By most measures the nation is now the world's largest consumer, using more grain, meat, coal, and steel than the United States. But apart from Deng Xiaoping, it's difficult to credit these critical changes to any specific government official. The Communist Party's main strategy has been to unleash the energy of the people, at least in the economic sense. In today's China, government is decentralized, and people can freely start businesses, find new jobs, move to new homes. After a century of powerful leaders and political turmoil, Chinese history has become the story of average citizens.

The two books by Hessler that are must-reads:
Rivertown:  Two Years on the Yangtze
Oracle Bones: A Journey Through Time in China