Mao: The Unknown Story

by Jung Chang
Mao: The Unknown Story  
published November 14th 2006 by Anchor
binding Paperback
isbn 0679746323   (isbn13: 9780679746324)
pages 864
description In the epilogue to her biography of Mao Tse-tung, Jung Chang and her husband and cowriter Jon Halliday lament that, "Today, Mao's portrait and hi...more
date added
12-13-06



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A Tough Read, but worth it 11 12 06/24/2008 07:10PM

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Francisco
Francisco rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
03/07/08

recommended to Francisco by: Luis Puga
I love biographies and it seems every biography has a certain amount of bias. Sometimes the biogrpaher seems infatuated with their subject, such as a recent biorgraphy I read about Teddy Roosevelt. The author of this book pretty much delcares her premise from the start, that Mao can be directly or inderectly blamed for the deaths of millions over his reign, more than those attributed to hitler and Stalin combined. This premise and mission is maintained unflinchingly throughout the entire book to...more
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Raghu
Raghu rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
05/05/07

Read in February, 2006
Historically, it has always been a problem for communists to accept the Freudian message that all of us, irrespective of greatness, have a dark side to our character. Because of this reluctance, Marx, Engels, Lenin and Mao have all been shown to be 'pure' in a way that smacks of communism being a religious cult.

Irrespective of the validity of the anonymous sources and KGB archives used by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday in this book, the following points seem to be a fact of life:

1. That Mao...more
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Matt
09/05/08

bookshelves: biography, history
Read in September, 2008
Many people have faulted this book for being biased and "anti-Mao." However, it is one thing to be biased and to pretend like one isn't and quite another to state right up front exactly how one feels. This is what the Chang does in this book as she does her part to see the myth of Mao come crumbling down. I can see why this book has been banned in China!
Chang has a reason to want to show the true Mao - her family lived through Mao's Hell and directly experienced what it was like t...more
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Ruth
Ruth rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
01/26/08

Read in November, 2006
recommends it for: Anyone interested in recent Chinese history
If you are at all curious about Chairman Mao, you should read this book. But I must warn you that Chang is not an unbiased narrator. it is obvious that she is angry at Mao and wants to reveal him as the sadist she believes him to be. With good reason of course; her family suffered through a lot as members of the Communist party. But she does occasionally offer him a little sympathy, and I finished this book with a picture of Mao as a power-hungry, disillusioned man who caused his country sig...more
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Hugo
09/23/07

Read in May, 2007
Most people have that moment. It might be the first time you watch Schindler's List or perhaps meet someone with a tattooed number on their arm. At that moment the full enormity and monstrous side of human nature is revealed; when you finally for just a little bit, come to terms with the six million people who were killed in the gas chambers of Hitler's Germany.


Mao: The Unknown Story written by Jung Chang is one such book. Instead of the holocaust this is a biography about the person resp...more
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Graham
Graham added it
07/15/08

Sets a new standard in Mao biographies: Whatever side of the political fence you sit on (left or right), you will find this book engrossing. This book (years in the making) sets a new standard about the life of the twentieth century's most powerful man.

The research is staggering, and is painstakingly detailed in large sections at the book of the book which lists recent interviews and printed documents (past and present). Despite his accomplishments, there's no denying that Mao caused the deat...more

The research is staggering, and is painstakingly detailed in large sections at the book of the book which lists recent interviews and printed documents (past and present). Despite his accomplishments, there's no denying that Mao caused the deaths of millions of his countrymen, and held back the economic, political and cultural progress of the world's largest nation.

In particular, the Cultural Revolution of the 60s remains the most shameful and horrifying chapter in recent Chinese history. Survivors of that era have recounted their horror stories many times, and this book corroborates their accounts.

One thing remains common in every era of Maoist China: his appetite for power. Mao deserves credit for ousting the "foreign barbarians" uniting China under one flag, but in the end Mao was another Chinese emperor, a despot who clung to power too long for the country's good and wound up destroying whatever legacy he had built in his early life.

This sentiment will offend Maoists -- and there remain many among the Chinese, just like JFK is a sacred cow to the Americans, Trudeau for Canadians, and Churchill to the Brits. But Mao's legacy is covered in blood, not glory, and this monumental book tells why. Recommended....less

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charlie
charlie rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
07/14/08

Read in July, 2008
Wow! Epic. A book of immense scope. Not short of controversy. A portrait of Mao as Monster, psychopath, paranoid, egotistical tyrant without a idealogical bone in his corrupt body.

I usually avoid books of this length, but i plowed thru this even tho every page, every paragraph outlines another horrific atrocity. Immensely engaging, and readable. I knew very little of Republic of China history, and the story of Mao basically introduces you to it all.

The controversy is that the book ...more
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Andrew
Andrew rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
08/18/07

Read in July, 2007
recommends it for: Anyone interested in modern history
This is a comprehensive hatchet job on the Western myth of Mao's "making of modern China". It should be read by everyone who grew up in the post-war years, with the recurrent fascination our society had with the internal convulsions of the "People's Republic" and its growing influence on its neighbours.

It is well written - I noticed a few repetitions, but nothing annoying, and it kept my interest throughout.

I'm sure the passion that comes through the book's relentle...more
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John
John rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
05/01/08

bookshelves: biography, borrowed, history
Read in May, 2007
This must be my day for depressing books. This morning I finished Nory Ryan's Song and tonight I finished Mao. This book is one that shook my faith. Not my faith in God, but rather the belief I have that truth will win out in a person's lifetime. It's a belief that charlatans will eventually be exposed, the incompetent eventually replaced and the tyrants eventually overthrown. According to this biography, Mao Zedong is all three. He's presented as a power hungry slob who sacrificed...more
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Pamela
Pamela rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
06/17/08

Read in June, 2008
Just like when I read Wild Swans byt Jung Chang, there were times when my eyes almost crossed when she is writing of politics and military maneuvers. However, I felt that anyone interested in 20th Century China should read both. There has been some controversy about the accuracy of some of the information, but overall, from what I have read, there is some new information that has been verified (Russia's involvement in Chinese politics during the civil war, for example).

Sometimes, I think Ju...more
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pinkgal
pinkgal rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
07/03/07

bookshelves: redstar
How do I review a book like this? I don't know, because I have decidedly mixed feelings about Mao myself. Jung Chang wrote the amazing "Wild Swans" biography/autobiography, but her voice there falls far short of the voice here. I'll be honest. It's very, very biased. She presents the work as *factual* when it's not actually quite that factual. Much of her interpretation and statements are based off of things like, "a dear friend of Mao's said..." and yet, the friend is *not* ...more
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Mike
Mike rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
12/26/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: budding dictators.
There is really only one lesson to take away from this book: the Chairman was not a very nice man. If the authors are to be believed, he completely lacked any shred of human decency or compassion. He never visited his dying father. He let the Nationalists execute one of his wives, and let another one waste away from insanity in Moscow. To say Mao was an absent father is putting it mildly. Oh, and there were also the millions of people he killed, either directly, on his orders, or indirectly...more
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Kimberly
Kimberly rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/17/07

bookshelves: non-fiction
Read in November, 2006
Whoa. Intense. Incredible story. My view of Chinese communism has totally been enlightened by this careful, powerful book. There is a balance of political facts and human interest in this non-fiction book, and some disturbing imagery of the pains faced by the Chinese people at the hands of Mao. Really, a must read, though not an easy one.

I read this while I was still nursing, and needed to spend about an hour a day while at work pumping. One story about a woman hung by her hands in the middl...more
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Cameron
Cameron rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
08/05/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in June, 2007
An extremely detailed - and profoundly disturbing - biography of Mao. While I was not convinced that the authors were free of bias, the thoroughness and depth of this account makes it a worthwhile read.

I read it in less than a week because it is the most unsettling window I have ever read into why some people rise to the top in fragmented, chaotic political situations. The authors go through every power struggle and rivalry of Mao's career in painstaking detail, and the reasons that Mao o...more
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Phil
Phil rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
03/18/08

Read in January, 2006
recommends it for: Modern History Readers
When I was in high school in the 1960's I was fond of The Cultural Revolution. The idea that the students could arrest their teachers and put them on public trial filled my purile adolescent mind with joy. Until I ran away to the Bay Area and actually met some committed Maoists it was all just a funny joke. It was not a funny joke. This book is a portrait of a man, exactly like Hitler and Stalin, without any real friends, surrounded by people who were rightly afraid for their lives and at the sa...more
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Jeff
Jeff rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
03/29/07

bookshelves: nonfiction
Read in March, 2007
recommends it for: anyone
I'm going to have to come back to this; it's an exhaustive read. I will say this: I would have given it five stars but for the fact that the writing itself is extremely textbookish. At times, reading it was a chore that ranks up there with getting through John Galt's 60-page speech in Atlas Shrugged. But Mao is so well researched and such an interesting topic, covering a fascinating period in Chinese history ...

Update: If you really are a glutton for punishment an...more
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mark
mark rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
05/07/07

The authors show how Mao was helped to power by the Russians on the basis of his ruthlessness alone, and the miscalculations of the Americans and the Nationalist Generallisimo. Once in power his obsessive monitoring of others and the cleaning of his own tracks allowed him to constantly denounce and divide potential rivals. His main agenda was the merely the spread of his own personal influence, which ironically eroded his real power in the world by destroying the Chinese economy and culture. Th...more
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Liza
Liza rated it: 1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars
06/18/08

Read in June, 2008
recommended to Liza by: Be ware of used books in perfect condition!
recommends it for: Michael Moore fans
In some ways, I loved this book - it was fascinating. Unfortunately, I couldn't believe a word of it (though I imagine a good chunk of the facts are true). Chen is to Mao as Michael Moore is to documentaries. She never wants you to think for yourself.

This book is sold as a biography, not an editorial. Yet Chen takes minute (and unverifiable?) details from Mao's life and goes on wild acid trips with them: "As a four-year old, Mao ate vegetables. Clearly, his evil intentions were p...more
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Jana
Jana rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
05/08/08

bookshelves: asian, biography, history
Read in January, 2006
Jung Chang wrote a beautiful story in Wild Swans, the biograpy of her own family through the Mao era, but this biography she has written of Mao Zedong is flawed in that she clearly lets her overwhelming hatred for what her family went through keep her from being an objective biographer. Chang paints Mao as a monster. He did fail as a leader, but he also did many good things for China. A historian--the role Chang is attempting to assume here--needs to look at all sides of these issues of p...more
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Carrie
Carrie rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
07/28/08

My first reaction upon finishing this book was....holy crap. If even half of the allegations against Mao in this book are true (and I believe them all to be) it is astonishing to think of the destruction and carnage that he got away with.
What really struck me most about this book was how his repressive methods worked so well. It's an unnerving truth and sad testament to the human race. This one man was able to instill such overwhelming and consuming fear into a host of powerful and influenti...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.81 (432 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.80 (367 ratings)
number of reviews: 137