Ian Johnson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer who has spent twenty years in China writing for The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, as well as serving for five years on the editorial board of The Journal of Asian Studies. He is the author of three other books that focus on the intersection of politics and civil society, including The Souls of China: The Return of Religion After Mao, and Wild Grass: Three Stories of Change in Modern China. He is the founder of the China Unofficial Archive and lives in Berlin, Germany.
"...an intimate and compelling portrait of China's underground
history movement." -- The New York Times"Johnson vividly describes
the work of independent documentary filmmakers, independent
journalists, amateur historians, novelists, and memoirists who
obsessively pursue the forbidden truths of totalitarian misrule in
China." -- Foreign Affairs"Illuminating. . . . [Johnson] offers a
rare hopeful perspective." -- Melanie Kirkpatrick, The Wall Street
Journal
"Ian Johnson is one of the most experienced and thoughtful Western
journalists writing about China. Now he has turned his attention to
one of the most important battles in contemporary China: the
struggle to control history ... Moving and full of human character
and detail. It's a compelling read, beautifully written, and the
product of deep research carried out in China over many years ...
an exemplary tribute." -- Rana Mitter, Literary Review"[a]
compellingly written work. . . . a rare insight into the
extraordinary risks that some Chinese take to illuminate the
darkest corners of communism." -- The Economist"Ian Johnson has
been 'a student of China' in the best sense of this phrase. . . .
His cast of characters has grown and no matter how brief the
appearance is, he diligently notes each person's name as if he,
too, is fending off erasure. The landscape has widened, and he
insists that readers see China the way he sees it: how the
sprawling geography, history, and people who animate it are
intricately intertwined." -- Han Zhang, The Atlantic"Superb,
stylishly written." --The New Yorker"Johnson (The Souls of China)
delivers a striking account of people who have defied authority to
document negative aspects of life under the Chinese Communist
Party... This immersive survey combines interviews, firsthand
reportage, and historical research to paint a moving group portrait
of China's political dissidents." -- Publishers Weekly"A brave book
about inspiring people, underlining the value of freedom,
independence, and courage." -- Kirkus Reviews"An indelible feat of
reporting and an urgent read, Ian Johnson's Sparks is alive with
the voices of the countless Chinese who fiercely, improbably,
refuse to let their histories be forgotten. It's a privilege to
read books like these." -- Te-Ping Chen, author of Land of Big
Numbers"For decades, Ian Johnson has conducted some of the most
important grassroots research of any foreign journalist in China.
With Sparks, he turns his attention to history--not the sanctioned,
censored, and selective history promoted by the Communist Party,
but the independent histories that are being written and filmed by
brave individuals across the country. A powerful reminder of how
China's future depends on who controls the past." -- Peter Hessler,
National Book Award-winning author, and New Yorker writer"Sparks
tells the stories of underground historians who are determined to
write down China's hidden histories of famines, massacres, and
virus outbreaks. These stories show why Xi Jinping wants to control
history--because memories like these are sparks of light in a heavy
darkness." -- Li Yuan, New York Times columnist"A powerful
narrative of how the human spirit has survived the cruel repression
of Maoist totalitarianism and is still doing the same against Xi
Jinping's efforts to impose a new form of digital totalitarianism.
A must read for anyone interested in the Chinese and China." --
Steve Tsang, University of London"In the long years of Chinese
people's pursuit of justice and equality, preserving historical
truth has always been a fierce but unseen battle. As Ian Johnson's
Sparks shows, today's fighters for the truth are backed by vast
armies--the seen and unseen, the living and the dead--who together
are prying open the lies on which totalitarianism is built." -- Cui
Weiping, Beijing-based critic and translator of Vaclav Havel into
Chinese"A stunning portrayal of some of the most courageous
individuals in China today, who probe the forbidden and voice the
unspeakable." -- Yangyang Cheng, China Books Review"A powerful book
that definitely qualifies as a work of history as well as of
journalism." -- Jeffrey Wasserstrom, The Best China Books of 2023,
Five Books"Sharing untold but true stories of a nation's past is
important and necessary to help it learn about itself....Sparks
highlights the brave historians who look for ways to bend and ebb
around Chinese state control to ensure stories can be told. My
rating 4.5." -- Kelly Thunstrom, 1776 Books - A Philadelphian's
Literary Journal"This thought-provoking and thoroughly researched
volume by Johnson (Council on Foreign Relations) seeks to reveal
how some intellectuals in China have overcome crackdowns and
censorship to challenge the state's monopoly on history and how
they have engaged in struggles of memory against forgetting." --
Choice
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