Bitter Winds - A Memoir Of My Years In China's Gulag

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Gripping memoir for history & human rights enthusiasts.

"Bitter Winds" is a compelling memoir that provides a raw and haunting insight into the life of Chinese prison camps during the Maoist era and afterward. It is a must-read for history and human rights enthusiasts as the author exposes the terrifying yet pivotal moments of his life. The book also highlights the Chinese practice of exporting forced labor goods illegally into the U.S., ultimately leading to Harry Wu's congressional testimony and continuing investigation into his findings.

Bitter Winds - A Memoir Of My Years In China's Gulag

Regular price RM36.18 MYR
Unit price
per
ISBN: 9780471114253
Authors: Harry Wu
Publisher: Wiley
Date of Publication: 1995-05-04
Format: Paperback
Related Collections: History, Biographies & Memoirs
Goodreads rating: 4.14
(rated by 253 readers)

Description

In the powerful tradition of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago, Bitter Winds chronicles a brave man's triumph over mindless brutality and unimaginable oppression. On April 27, 1960, Harry Wu, a senior at Beijing's Geology Institute, was arrested by Chinese authorities and, without ever being formally charged or tried, spent the next nineteen years in hellish prison labor camps. Exiled to the bitter desolation of this extensive gulag, he was transformed from a member of China's privileged intellectual elite into a pariah, a faceless cipher denied even the most basic human rights. He was subjected to grinding labor, systematic starvation, and torture, yet he refused to give up his passionate hold on life. From the tough peasants and petty criminals imprisoned with him, like chicken thief Big Mouth Xing, he learned the harsh lessons of survival. Driven by incessant hunger, he became expert at scavenging for edible weeds in the barren camp fields and capturing snakes and frogs in the irrigation ditches. Reduced at one point to a walking skeleton, he took part in elaborate "food imagining" sessions with his squad mates in the barracks at night. In the crucible of the nightmarish Qinghe prison farm, he watched as, night after night, prisoners succumbed to disease and starvation to be buried in unmarked graves outside the camp walls. Throughout this stunning chronicle are moving stories of the prisoners who became Wu's trusted friends. The gentle, lute-playing Ao, unblinking in his insistence on the dignity of humanity, serves as a beacon in the moral abyss of the camps. Handsome and virile Lu, tormented by unfulfilled longing for a woman's touch, is driven to insanity and finallysuicide. Buffeted by the worst horrors of the Chinese communist tragedy, these poignant figures provide a rare, detailed portrait of the depths of human despair. Released from prison in 1979, Harry Wu was eventually allowed to leave China for the United States. But his story doe
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Gripping memoir for history & human rights enthusiasts.

"Bitter Winds" is a compelling memoir that provides a raw and haunting insight into the life of Chinese prison camps during the Maoist era and afterward. It is a must-read for history and human rights enthusiasts as the author exposes the terrifying yet pivotal moments of his life. The book also highlights the Chinese practice of exporting forced labor goods illegally into the U.S., ultimately leading to Harry Wu's congressional testimony and continuing investigation into his findings.