This is a unique account of the Chinese Revolution, seen through the
eyes of American journalist Rayna Prohme. Prohme and her husband edited
the Kuomintang's English-language newspaper in Wuhan. Her account of her
intimate involvement in the Chinese Revolution brings to life the
eventful Wuhan years of 1926-27. Her letters illuminate from a personal
angle the battle for China's future. They include remarkable portraits
of some of the people who shaped the Communist and Nationals movements
of the time. The book consists of letters Prohme wrote to her closest
friend and her husband in the period immediately before, during, and
after the Wuhan Interlude. Her reporting brought her into contact with
many major political figures, including Madam Sun Yat-sen (a prominent
figure in the op position to Chiang Kai-shek) and Mikhail Borodin (a
chief Soviet advisor in China). This book provides an unusual and often
moving insight into a fascinating period in modern Chinese history.