China has become one of the largest study and teach-abroad, travel, and
business destinations in the world. Yet few books offer a diversity of
perspectives and locales for Westerners considering the leap. This
unique collection of letters offers a rarely seen, intimate, and
refreshingly honest view of living and working in China. Here, ordinary
people-recent college graduates, teachers, professors, engineers,
lawyers, computer whizzes, and parents- recount their experiences in
venues ranging from classrooms to marketplaces to holy mountains. The
writers are genuine participants in the daily life of their adopted
country, and woven throughout their correspondence is the compelling
theme of outsiders coping in a culture that is vastly foreign to them
and the underlying love-hate struggle it engenders. We follow their
initial highs; the shift to general discomfort and then to full-blown
culture shock; and slowly, the return of a sense of balance, identity,
and normalcy; and finally, the decision to return home or stay. Written
in a down-to-earth, personal, often humorous, always authentic style,
these tales of trials, successes, and failures offer invaluable insight
into a country that remains endlessly fascinating.