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“Vivid and humane…richly revealing and contemporary…at turns, bold and vulnerable, like China itself.”
— Evan Osnos, National Book Award–winning author of Age of Ambition
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A heartfelt introduction into China's recent history -- and a rare
firsthand dispatch from its millennial generation....For those seeking
to understand the future of China and U.S.-China relations, voices like
hers are an essential part of the conversation.
— The Wall Street Journal
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Marie Claire, Inspiring Memoirs by Women That Are More Addictive Than Fiction!Bustle, New Memoirs Out In Spring To Help You Welcome Warm-Weather Reading!
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Vivid and humane, Karoline Kan's memoir of coming of age in China is
richly revealing and contemporary, shaped both by the pain of history
and the hope for the future - at turns bold and vulnerable, like China
itself.
— Evan Osnos, National Book Award-winning author of Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth, and Faith in the New China and New Yorker staff writer
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Karoline Kan's intimate portrait of growing up in contemporary China opens a new window onto a country going through lightning-fast change.
— Edward Wong, International Correspondent and Former Beijing Bureau Chief, The New York Times
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Under Red Skies is a beautiful look at the struggles of China's fast-changing society. In Karoline's inspiring and heartfelt stories of her family, she voices how much Chinese people have overcome. This book should be read by people from all corners of the world if they want to know the real story of China.
— Xinran, author of The Good Women of China
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Karoline Kan's Under Red Skies is an engrossing account of a rapidly changing China seen through the eyes of an imaginative, ambitious young woman... An intimate coming-of-age story, this book should be read by anyone seeking to understand the aspirations and frustrations of young people in China today.
— Leta Hong Fincher, author of Betraying Big Brother: The Feminist Awakening in China
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A fascinating memoir about three generations of Chinese women. Whereas classics like Wild Swans end with the Cultural Revolution, Under Red Skies picks up where Jung Chang leaves off in this look at contemporary Chinese life and history as it changes before our eyes.
— Lijia Zhang, author of Socialism is Great! A Worker's Memoir of The New China
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With her revealing and introspective account of growing up in post-1989
China, Kan fills a void in contemporary literature on the country.
While the profound societal shakeup that unfolded during that period has
left everyone of her generation with a remarkable story, few have
possessed such skill and courage in telling theirs.
— Eric Fish, author of China?s Millennials: The Want Generation
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Poignant, humane, and insightful, [Under Red Skies] brings the extraordinary story of the last fifty years in China vividly alive. The Kan family's struggles to survive and prosper through many adversities, largely inflicted on them by government, are a moving testament to the resilience and determination of three generations of women.
— Isabel Hilton, OBE, founder of China Dialogue and author of The Search for the Panchen Lama
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A remarkable multigenerational memoir that clearly explores 'the real
China-its beauty and ugliness, the weird and familiar, the joyful and
sad, progressive and backward at the same time.'
— Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
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Kan presents an engaging debut memoir that would make an excellent book club choice.
— Library Journal
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[Kan is] an eloquent, restrained and gripping writer.
— TruthDig
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[Kan] has written the gripping autobiography of a generation--and a superpower--caught between tradition and ambition.
— The Economist
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Razor sharp... [this book is a] coherent explanation of the dizzying changes that have affected daily life in contemporary China.
— The South China Morning Post
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[Kan] is a clear and straightforward writer, walking readers through her own life and that of her family... An impressive [story].
— Asian Review of Books
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Stunning.
— Remotelands.com
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It's enjoyable to get to know Kan on the page; she tells moving family tales as well as poignant personal stories, and serves as an engagingly candid guide to the fascinating generation she is a part of.
— New York Times