Paul French has lived and worked in Shanghai for many years. He is a widely published analyst, journalist and commentator on China and foreign business in the country. This is his third book. His first was One Billion Shoppers - Accessing Asia's Consuming Passions After the Meltdown written with Matthew Crabbe and inspired by Carl Crow's similarly titled book. Recently, Paul French has written the well-received North Korea The Paranoid Peninsula - A Modern History.
"'With the latest gang of get-rich-quick hucksters, hustlers and fools still washing up thick on the muddy banks of Shanghai, there could be no better timing for this lively, anecdote-rich account of the life of Carl Crow, who saw the whole thing unfold the last go round. His wry take on the desperate quest for profit in the world's most populous nation is as relevant today as ever.' - Peter S. Goodman, Asian Economic Correspondent/ Shanghai Bureau Chief, The Washington Post 'Carl Crow's story of rags to riches to rags again set against the turbulent history of Shanghai makes for a gripping read. As a newshound, businessman, writer and entrepreneur, Crow's insights into China's modernization - and Western fantasies about the China market - are as fresh and illuminating as they were at the time. This is much more than a biography but brings together the whole story of Shanghai's rise and fall. The book is full of vivid details and amusing and sometimes sad stories which anyone interested in Shanghai's future and its past will enjoy.' - Jasper Becker, author of The Chinese and Hungry Ghosts 'Shanghai resident Paul French has written a lively, exhaustive narrative account of the life and times of entrepreneur and Shanghai businessman Carl Crow. An absorbing story about a pioneering figure in transnational commercial capitalism during the first half of the twentieth century.' - Tani E. Barlow, Professor of History, University of Washington"
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