Editore: Methuen & Co., London, 1957
Da: Eric James, Lewisporte, NL, Canada
Prima edizione
EUR 13,29
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHard Cover. Condizione: Very Good ++. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good. First British Edition. Hardcover with unclipped dust jacket, 219 pages, plus black-and-white illustrations; book very gently used, light bumps to spine ends, otherwise hardly a trace of shelf wear, very clean and unmarked throughout; DJ bumped along top edge, numerous tiny chips, now in new mylar protector. For something completely different, see also our listing for for Dr. W. Rosenberg's incredibly scarce Local Post in China: History - Description - Prices: A Study Based Upon Private Collections, or for Masterpieces of 20th Century Chinese Painting.
Editore: Methuen, London, 1957
Da: Victoria Bookshop, BERE ALSTON, DEVON, Regno Unito
EUR 17,85
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good. 8vo. Bump to top corner of boards. Crease to top of pages.Dw has Wear to edges, tears to corners, spine ends and a piece is missing from the top of spine. Book.
EUR 5,95
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Good. hardback, 8vo, 219pp, illustrated, owner's bookplate, text clean and sound, red cloth, spine rubbed, Good / no dustwrapper.
Editore: New York, The John Day Company, 1957., 1957
Da: INDOSIAM RARE BOOKS, HONG KONG, HK, Hong Kong
EUR 10,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello1 volume in-8, 256 pp., black cloth hardback with a red dragon pattern on the cover, flat spine, one Chinese stamp on the title page, minor tears on the spine, clean pages, very good condition.
Editore: John Day Company,, NY:, 1957
Da: Grendel Books, ABAA/ILAB, Springfield, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good. Translated from the Norwegian by Katherine John. First edition thus. Gift inscription on front free endpaper, else very good in a good (large chip on front panel, several small chips, age darkened) dust jacket.
Editore: Methuen & Co Ltd., London., 1955
Da: Asia Bookroom ANZAAB/ILAB, Canberra, ACT, Australia
EUR 20,90
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloTranslated from Norwegian. Map, decorative endpapers, black and white photographic plates, 219pp. Library stamp on front free endpaper, no other library markings, some wear to covered dustjacket, very good copy. Sigurd Eliassen, a Norwegian engineer, was assigned the task of irrigating Shaanxi just prior to World War II. This is a chatty account of his relationships with the local people during the four years it took to complete.
Editore: NY: John Day, 1957
Da: Ethnographics, Georgetown, TX, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good. 1st Edition. 1stUSedn of 1955 London edn; 8vo black cloth hardback with a red dragon pattern on the cover, red titles to spine, uncliptdj, one Chinese stamp on the title page, slt foxing to eps ow VG/vgdj: 256pp, map, bw photo illus; Sigurd Eliassen, a Norwegian engineer, was assigned the task of irrigating Shaanxi just prior to World War II. This is a chatty account of his relationships with the local people during the four years it took to complete./NYT review By John J. Espey Nov. 3, 1957;ABOUT twenty-five years ago Sigurd Eliassen, an American - educated Norwegian engineer, was sent by the International Relief Organization to the Province of Shensi to dam the Ching River in an area that suffered periodically from famine because of insufficient water. According to legend, the Ching had once before been dammed, in the reign of the Emperor Ch'in Shih Huang, and the Chinese engineers had tried to bring the water not only to the plains but to the higher Yuan Shang plateau north of the river. Mr. Eliassen's task was to construct a dam and an irrigation canal on the lower level, roughly paralleling the old Imperial canal, and at the same time not antagonize the farmers living on the plateau, to whom he could promise nothing at least until he had studied the problems of building a higher dam farther up the gorge of the Ching. After he saw the floods of the Ching in a rainy season Mr. Eliassen realized that the larger dam would never be practical, but he brought to completion the lower dam and irrigation project. He was not successful, however, in keeping the peace with the plateau-dwellers, and one among them in particular became his personal enemy. Though Mr. Eliassen had no proof at first that this man definitely stood in his way the accidents and coincidences piled up. Some time later, when Mr. Eliassen returned to the district, he was captured and held for ransom by bandits, this time clearly under the leadership of his old enemy. The latter part of his book recounts his adventures during his captivity, the fate of the five government spies sent out to gather information about him and his eventual escape.Mr. Eliassen writes more or less as an amateur novelist, using his associates as characters in a somewhat complicated plot. The most enigmatic of these is Mrs, Miao, an attractive middle-aged woman who is a power among the villagers on the plateau. It is her oldest son who is Mr. Eliassen's antagonist but at the same time her two younger sons work for him, and one of them is actually his personal attendant. Other individuals include a Miss Olsen of the Scandinavian Alliance Mission; Malik, Mr. Eliassen's inexhaustible White Russian mechanic and chauffeur; Chuan, his grasping Chinese assistant, and a gallery of local government functionaries. As an engineer, Mr. Eliassen has an eye for the contours of the land; but more than this, he also responds to its atmosphere, and he includes a set-piece on his pilgrimage to Hua Shan, one of the five sacred mountains of China.THE period is that of the modern war lords, who were hesitant either to strike out for themselves or to throw in with Chiang Kai-shek's new regime, and Mr. Eliassen gives a good account of the shifts of authority, the abrupt reverses of the local civil wars and the entire problem of undertaking reconstruction work in the China of that day-and probably of this. His relations with his underlings, his efforts to see that money was not wasted and his dealings with the villagers are all detailed. Although one feels that he never penetrates very far beneath the surface, as he proceeds he does quite casually build up a picture of the old and new Chinas, of the conflicts and stresses in the land, And by occasional references to the old imperial legend and the fate of the Ching's first engineers, he succeeds in suggesting, without ever blatantly stating the fact, that twentieth-century China still faces the problems that follow upon the decay of a great empire.