Three Amazing Sisters, Portrayed by an Amazing Chronicler of China
In its own quiet way, The Soong Sisters by Emily Hahn has become one of E-Reads' bestselling nonfiction books, and even a cursory look at the story of these three extraordinary individuals will tell you why it compels us decades later. And though the release of this writeup is timed to tie to the Beijing Olympics and the soaring rise of China to a dominant place among the world's superpowers, it's not because China is in the news that we recommend this book to you.Through inheritance or marriage the girls were among the wealthiest and most influential in China in the 1930s as the clouds of two wars -- first between China and Japan, then the Second World War -- roiled over Asia. Politically, the sisters had been divided between nationalism and Communism and for many years the two supporters of nationalism - Ai-ling and Mei-ling - did not speak to their Communist sympathizer sister Ching-ling. All that changed when the Japanese brutally invaded and occupied their country. It is worth a few moments of your time to read the Wikipedia entry summarizing their story. It's worth a few hours of your time to read the inspiring The Soong Sisters.
The Soong Sisters is the second book by Emily Hahn published by E-Reads, the other being China to Me, about which I have written so enthusiastically elsewhere in these pages (see A Missouri Feminist Captures Shanghai). And there are more books to come by one of the most remarkable women of the Twentieth Century.- Richard Curtis
Labels: China, Emily Hahn, Richard Curtis






