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Hardcover Kowloon Tong Book

ISBN: 0395860296

ISBN13: 9780395860298

Kowloon Tong

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Ninety-nine years of colonial rule are ending as the British prepare to hand over Hong Kong to China. For Betty Mullard and her son, Bunt, it doesn't concern them - until the mysterious Mr. Hung from... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Finely Written Novel of the Ambivalencies of Hong Kong

I read this after returning from a trip to Hong Kong where I became fascinated by the contradictions of this beautiful city. Theroux has given us a finely written novel embodying the ambivalencies of the various residents of Hong Kong. Bunt, an Englishman born in Hong Kong, and his crass and racist mother, Betty, are slowly 'forced' by a seeming Chinese businessman into selling their long owned label factory in the year before Hong Kong is to be handed over by the British to the Chinese. Menace builds slowly in this mesmerizing story that is a metaphor for British colonialism in Hong Kong, and Chinese Communism.

One of Several Essential Books on Hong Kong for Visitors

This Hong Kong classic is both a great read and a great help for Westerners planning to live in, or visit Hong Kong. I first read it when I lived there in the late 90's, even began reading it on the Star Ferry when it came out in early 1997. Bunt is an old "Hong Kong Belonger", British, lives atop Victoria Peak ("the" address to have), has a factory in the district of Kowloon Tong, and has a pretty easy life thanks to the protection of British rule and law in a region better known for dictatorships. But all that is coming to an end, with Britain handing over Hong Kong to China. The Chinese military bureaucrat Hung arrives to force Bunt to sell the Chinese Army his business - the Red Army wants to start making some cash, and Bunt is bewildered and soft due to his life in the colony and can't cope well. The harshness of Hunt and the fuddy-duddyness of Bunt are well-drawn depictions of actual Hong Kong types. The ending is very Hong Kong. Also very Hong Kong are the myriads of other types depicted here - Chinese, British, American. The Chinese bigot yelling "Gweilo!" Bunt's horrible mother yelling "Chinky-Chonk!" The American trying to buy a new nationality to avoid paying US taxes. Many of the anecdotes and scenes perfectly capture the harsh underbelly of the place which has its origins in the tragic influx of all those millions of Chinese refugees fleeing China to the safety of then-British Hong Kong and the huge insecurities that created. This is a book to read both before you go AND after you've lived there for a year, many of the subtler aspects of the book will be revealed to you. One thing the book the makes no concessions to is the important concept in Chinese culture of "Face" - there is nothing more importatnat than NOT losing face in China, so warts-and-all books like this are not appreciated. But the book is written for any readers who like a good read to contain accuracy of description rather than a tourist bureau spin account. The book was banned in the People's Republic for just this reason (minor shades of Tiannamen Square!) There are also several in-house jokes which will become apparent after you've been in Hong Kong awhile - for example the placing of a factory in the district of Kowloon Tong, a subtle comment on how awful that residential district was to live in - locally reffered to as "exclusive" (this is "face" at work again), it sat under the final landing path of the international airport which was next door!If you're going to Hong Kong, also consider reading the other *Hong Kong classics* most expats have on their shelves: Jan Morris's *Hong Kong* has loads of information on Hong Kong up to 1997, including an important account of the tragic influx of all those millions of Chinese refugees fleeing China for Hong Kong, how that situation vastly overcrowded the place and made for a pressure-cooker atmosphere, and how even today it is embarressing for Hong Kong Chinese to talk about (again, it causes loss of "face

Highly evocative of Hong Kong I knew

I first read Kowloon Tong while living in Stanley, Hong Kong, just a few months before the Hand-over. I have found its rendering of attitudes of expatriates and chinese by far the most accurate account of the Hong Kong I experienced on a day to day basis. Theroux is equally fair (and equally blunt) about British, Chinese and American residents in Hong Kong - I encountered the boorish behaviour described here everyday - that was Hong Kong, a place where people went to make money, or to escape from China (or both). Not everyone, of course, was like Bunt and Hung, but these are recognizable types. The plot is that of Graham Greene thriller, with the sarcasm of Evelyn Waugh and Gore Vidal thrown in. I should add that I find many of the comments on this page highly evocative of the Hong Kong I knew, too - the novel was banned in China and was a painful read for some Hong Kong British, Chines and Americans I knew (especially the types well-described here -chiefly long-term residents). The detached reader should enjoy a good read that's also highly accurate in its description. The Hong Kong I knew was about the most un-literary place on the planet. "Criticism" of Hong Kong was thought of as a pamphlet from the Tourist Bureau, an announcement from the Government Publicity Office, or the Website of a company wanting to do business in China. But that is not what novelists do.

Unfair slagging shouldn't dissuade Theroux fans..Its good !

This is a page turner. Although primarily a fan of his travel yarns, I found this book to be a wonderful read. Compelling characters and a fascinating plot made me not want to put it down. The outcome is not predictable. The griping done by other readers seems unfair. The comments about how Theroux is a racist are ridiculous. Anybody who has read him before must know by now the whole world is a target for his barbs. If you enjoyed his other work, you will like this.

Very well written satire.

Having been brought up in a British Colony in the Far East (not Hongkong though), I was impressed by the author's farcial and prescient description of both the British and the Chinese characters. The only weakness in my opinion was that the hero's belated fallng in love with his employee didn't quite ring true. As in any good farce, there is also an element of tragedy which is embodied in the treatment the author expects the Hongkong citizens will receive from their future (now present) masters. A light and entertaining read.
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