A Billion to One
Online Reader's Reviews: Amazon.com and B&N.com
Posted
February 23, 2009
By Herb Haigh, St. Petersburg, Fl:
It doesn't seem all that long ago that I learned
that one of my favorite authors was headed for China to write another book. When he left, I signed up for his emails and not
only read them all with great interest I felt compelled to forward them to many of my friends who read and enjoyed them as
well. Now there are a group of us who will be reading and discussing Gene's observations and opinions in this long awaited
book. Thanks to Gene for keeping us tuned into this important social dynamic! (5 stars)
Worth a read Posted February
28, 2009
By Hengchun Ye, Los Angeles Ca:
I thought I knew China very well since it is where I am from, but
this book kept on surprising me. I enjoyed the daily life stories the author experienced with modern Chinese and couldn’t
help smiling or laughing at them. Some of the stories are quite common for western foreigners to encounter while living in
China, which makes it valuable for people who wish to visit or work in China to prepare for (their) cultural transition. It
is a very well-written book and worthwhile to buy. (5 stars)
Posted March 10, 2009
By David Gronbeck,
Seattle:
Before starting the book I wondered what it could offer that I hadn't already read, and I soon found
out. Mr Ayres paints a compelling, personal and insightful picture of a complex country emerging. It is significant that his
time was spent in the interior, away from usual coastal cities that are often chosen to represent China. The vignettes - many
satisfying by themselves - weave together to leave an impression, rather than a narrative of China. He manages to inject history
and travelogue in a nice, satisfying way. A very pleasant read. (4 stars)
Another prism, Posted February 28, 2009
By Written Word Addict:
Some of us have been there, maybe to the Olympics, maybe to negotiate a joint venture,
maybe to a scientific conference. Most of us have read about the rise of China as an economic superpower capable of consistent
growth rates of 10 percent -- give or take -- per year, year after year. Some have read about China as seen from a human rights
perspective or a cultural perspective. Not so many have seen China as Gene Ayres has, from the perspective of a visiting English
teacher, meeting ordinary college students (at least ones who want to learn conversational English. Getting to know them is
a good way of getting to know China, from the bottom up). (4 stars)
Wake up! Here's the real new China., Posted
February 24, 2009
By Carol Baron, Albuquerque, NM:
Want to know what the competition is up to? I loved Gene's
dispatches from Harbin, welcome his pulling it all together in this book.
Gene Ayres' astute, often humorous adventures
and perceptions while teaching in a Chinese university are not only a delight to read, but offer a valuable perspective on
the focus, intelligence, and hunger of the Chinese to be a major player in the 21st century world. It's like being there,
in a China sometimes astonishingly modern, sometimes inscrutably ancient, without paying the airfare.
Immersion
in dazzling China, Posted February 24th, 2009:
By CN/NM
Gene Ayres soaks up the people, food, and blazing
modernity of the New China and shares it all in this account of his living and teaching in a Harbin university. His astute
observations of people and places you’ll never encounter as a tourist bring an understanding of the ambition and focus
of the youth of a China hungry to play a very major role in the 21rst Century world. Like being there, sans air fare. (5 stars)