This book is beautiful. It is a collection of photographs spanning 1964-1980 in China, revealing a very intimate and unfiltered (however much you can gauge such a thing) perspective of the Communist/Cultural revolution and its reverberations and phases.
Li Zhensheng was working for the Newspaper of his northeastern province, Heilongjiang, and many of the photos are centered around what became a larger industrial city in the province, Harbin, so the perspective of the photos could be said to be limited.
However, they are revealing and magnificent in their content and preserve the humanity and struggle in this most cataclysmic and misunderstood event in China. They are masterfully taken and reveal more than they were likely meant to, due to Li's keen eye and photographic skill.
More than anything, the book reveals the humanity, flaws, struggle, idealism and hopefulness that went into the disastrously failed revolution.
It really expresses the near impossibility one faces in attempting to give an easy description of the revolution, and I find it difficult to try and address them without attempting to take part in the mostly failed dialogue about Communism that goes on in the U.S. The book is a good replacement for that dialogue, serving as a kind of first-hand, or primary source experience, and pumping the humanity and historical reality back into it.
That said, the accompanying texts by Li Zhensheng does the same, granting you a very clear and personal lens through which to view the events and circumstances surrounding these bizarre and tumultuous years. You get a sense of how difficult it was to steer through the choppy and constantly shifting sociopolitical waters of the time, while also getting a glimpse of the specific challenges and confusions the Chinese people faced.
Li's reflections are sparse and direct, but more powerful as a result. At times you want to hear more of his opinions and thoughts on what occurred, and perhaps there are many things he chose not to reveal and kept a distance from due to their gruesome nature, but the photos themselves speak volumes.
This book is an invaluable historical document.