Oracle Bones by Peter Hessler
Another fun thing is that Hessler steps out of the realm of stereotypes. Almost anything he writes about is atypical, the people, the circumstances, the times. So anything you look at, if you look close enough, is quite different from the general category it is in.
The term "oracle bones" refers to the tortoise plastrons used by the ancient diviners of the Shang dynasty. They cracked the bones and divined on the basis of the cracks. In the process, they also scratched short sentences onto the surface of the bones, and these are today the earliest examples of Chinese writing.
Hessler's Oracle Bones is a book about how China's present mirrors its past, and vice versa. If you were to read a book about China, read this one.
Labels: China, collecting
