The last eight centuries of China's relationship with the world told through the eyes of traders, invaders, civil servants, visionaries, and traitors
Timothy Brook was Shaw Professor of Chinese at Oxford when he first saw the Selden Map, and is now professor of history at the University of British Columbia. The author of eight books on Chinese history, including Vermeer's Hat and Mr Selden's Map of China, which are both published by Profile.
Brook's vigorous account [...] Great State offers some compelling
lessons for today, and for all our futures.
*New Statesman*
Praise for Vermeer's Hat :
Spell-binding ... as a guide to the world behind the pictures
Vermeer's Hat is mind-expanding.
*Sunday Times*
A brilliant attempt to make us understand the reach and breadth of
the first global age
*Guardian*
Brook takes you into the paintings in a way that can be spookily
intimate
*Evening Standard*
An erudite, surprising book that finds traces of swashbuckling
where you'd least expect
*Daily Telegraph*
Truly mesmerising. In this accessible but authoritative study,
he... shows better than anyone I've read so far, the truly
subversive power of detail
*Independent*
Praise for Mr Selden's Map of China:
The great charm of this book lies not only in its illustrative,
erudite detail but in the serendipity that regularly seizes Brook
and adds spice to a spellbinding story.
*the Times*
The quest is fascinating and picaresque, a sort of cartographical
Tristram Shandy with a sure-handed narrator steering us from Ming
dynasty China to pre-Civil War Oxford to the Spice Islands of
South-East Asia.
*Sunday Telegraph*
Excellent ... The power of this book lies partly in the fact that
Brook does not overstate his case. While he does not seek to claim
that China's current actions are prefigured by the past, an
attentive reader cannot fail to notice extraordinary parallels
*Financial Times*
Timothy Brook's Great State puts forward an elegant and compelling
argument for why we should look at the cosmopolitan part of the
Chinese mind-set as well.
*Literary Review*
What a pleasure to read a significant, original book that covers
millennia of Chinese history in an informal, often chatty, but
always learned style.
*Times Higher Education*
Scattered across the maps and paintings that Brook invokes, his
thirteen encounters take in pirates, merchants, soldiers, traders,
explorers, emperors and spiritual leaders - characters in China's
complex trade, military, spiritual and political relationships down
the centuries. Brook unravels the threads of these relationships
across a canvas of war,
friendship, savage struggles for power, lethal epidemic disease,
triumph and calamity. It is a dizzying and exhilarating
journey.
*New Statesman*
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