Tania Branigan writes editorials for the Guardian and spent seven years as its China correspondent, reporting on politics, the economy, and social changes. Her work has also appeared in the Washington Post. Red Memory is her first book. She lives in London.
"What makes Branigan’s account special is captured in a line at the
end of her work: ‘This book could not be written if I were to begin
it today’…. Amid the growing difficulties of accessing lived
experiences in China, Branigan’s lyrical style of writing lends
itself well to intimate encounters with interviewees.… Her
humanising approach to writing about China is particularly valuable
amid our current polarising geopolitical narrative, which loves
strong lines between enemies and allies. It is also appropriate for
capturing a decade in which the line between hunter and hunted
shifted with the political winds of the day."
*Yuan Yang - Financial Times*
"Compelling …. Red Memory is also an exercise in attempting the
impossible, of trying to reconstruct what it was like to live
through and then live with one of the most brutal periods of modern
Chinese history. Branigan comes closer to doing so than anyone else
has in the English language."
*Emily Feng - NPR*
"Red Memory... uses China’s Cultural Revolution as a timely
template for an accessible exploration of what societies choose to
remember, how they choose to remember it, what they decide to
forget and why it is important. Beautifully written and sensitively
reported."
*Gary Younge - New Statesman*
"Branigan’s book offers an equally important cautionary lesson: the
perils of ignoring or distorting history. What a country downplays
in its historical record continues to reverberate, whether it’s the
Cultural Revolution in China or the treatment of Native Americans
and the legacy of slavery in the United States."
*Pamela Paul - New York Times*
"This book is thoroughly deserving of prominence. It is complex …
because so is China."
*Max Hastings - Sunday Times*
"[A] penetrating study of the buried stories of the Cultural
Revolution of 1966 to 1976."
*Isabel Hinton - Prospect*
"This is a beautifully written and thought-provoking book."
*Yuan Yi Zhu - The Times*
"Branigan’s book is investigative journalism at its best, its
hard-won access eliciting deep insight. The result is a survey of
China’s invisible scars that makes essential reading for anyone
seeking to better understand the nation today."
*Marina Benjamin - Guardian*
"[An] absorbing study of the legacy of the Cultural
Revolution."
*Avro Chakraborty - Air Mail*
"[T]he past, as Ms. Branigan shows in this evocative book, is not
so easy to suppress."
*Stephen R. Platt - Wall Street Journal*
"Tania Branigan’s prose is masterful and crystalline. It feels as
if Joan Didion turned her powers of observation on China. Red
Memory is the kind of book capable of altering your understanding
of an unforgettable episode that is not a strange artifact of
history but, rather, an urgent warning about our deepest, most
durable frailties."
*Evan Osnos, National Book Award–winning author of Age of Ambition
and Wildland*
"Red Memory shows how the psychic wounds of Mao Zedong’s decade of
madness endure to this day, replicating themselves through the
generations."
*Barbara Demick, author of Nothing to Envy and Eat the Buddha*
"Tania Branigan offers nuanced, humane portraits of people whose
lives were transformed by those years, and also teaches the reader
much about the politics of memory."
*Hari Kunzru, author of Red Pill*
"Without understanding the Cultural Revolution and its long-term
influence, it is impossible to understand today’s China. I hope
that all China experts, policymakers, think tankers, and the public
perceive this and read Red Memory."
*Peidong Sun, associate professor of history, Cornell
University*
"[E]xceptional… offers insights at once deep and clear into
universal and timeless questions - of memory and forgetting, of
horror and what it takes both to survive it and inflict it. It is
haunting, evocative, and written with an almost painful beauty. I
cannot recommend it too highly."
*Jonathan Freedland, author of The Escape Artist*
"Unfailingly acute, exceptionally humane—a masterpiece."
*Julia Lovell, author of Maoism*
"A veritable masterwork."
*Qian Julie Wang, author of Beautiful Country*
"Red Memory will tell you more about Xi Jinping’s rule than any
tome on economics."
*Lindsey Hilsum, author of In Extremis*
"A breathtaking work."
*Oliver Burkeman, author of Four Thousand Weeks*
"A visceral history of the Cultural Revolution and a probing look
at how modern-day Chinese Communist Party has sought to erase this
chapter from its past…This is essential reading for China
watchers."
*Publishers Weekly (starred review)*
"[Branigan delivers] poignant, engaging stories that reveal the
deep scars left by the Cultural Revolution.…Across a beautifully
rendered text, the author astutely examines the Maoist ideology
that drove the tumultuous class struggle and destruction….
Sensitive [and] well-researched."
*Kirkus Reviews (starred review)*
"Branigan weaves fascinating, unbelievable, and often terrifying
personal narratives into her analysis. Her deep insight into a
nation's painted-over trauma explains how mass hysteria, rampant
betrayal, and even cannibalism have shattered a society for
generations afterwards."
*Booklist*
"Stunning, profound and gorgeously written, “Red Memory” is a
must-read for anyone interested in understanding China today."
*Patricia L. Hagen - Minneapolis Star Tribune*
"Branigan expertly documents both the power and the frailty of
memory in the face of an unrelenting campaign by the Chinese
Communist Party to bend and twist people’s recollections into
whatever shapes best suit the CCP in the present…. Literature on
the Cultural Revolution is a saturated market, but only rarely does
it convey as Branigan does the continuing hold of that decade on a
people otherwise transformed by economic development, technological
progress, and newfound social and physical mobility."
*Mary Gallagher - Foreign Affairs*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |