US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Culture

History a hot topic for publishers

By Sun Ye and Mei Jia ( China Daily ) Updated: 2014-01-14 09:24:03

Growing Up with Willie: How a Father Built a Colorful Life for His Autistic Son, published by Modern Press, focuses on Chinese-American David Zhuo-xi Peng's 15 years with his autistic child, and how he helped his son become independent and self-sufficient.

History a hot topic for publishers

Book lovers flock to fair

History a hot topic for publishers

Historic guqin songs brought back to life

The book's author Huo Changhe spent five months living with the Peng family in the United States as part of his research. The book was warmly welcomed when launched at the book fair.

To mark the 35th anniversary of the reform and opening-up policy, the research center of the central committee of the Communist Party of China has put together An Oral History of the Reform and Opening Up by China Renmin University Press. The book details how various policies were developed and features 50 first-hand recollections.

Among the interviewees is Wan Li, former provincial secretary of Anhui province and a member of the Party's top leadership body. Wan recounts how reforms transformed rural areas. Tian Xueyuan, former head of the institute of population at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, recalls how the family planning policy came into being.

Celebrities' children have continued to release biographies. Mao Xinyu's new book about his mother Shao Hua, Mao Zedong's daughter-in-law, will be released in early January by the China Workers Publishing House.

In culture, Gao Peifen's Rhythmic Notation of Ancient Guqin Songs by Zhonghua Book Company, breaks new ground in the realm of guqin, the seven-stringed plucked instrument with a 4,000-year history but only 100 songs remaining in its repertoire. Because of the lack of proper modern music scores that tell the tempo and mode of playing, some 3,000 tunes are unheard today.

Gao, an representative inheritor of the guqin, has combed through massive amounts of material to re-discover 15 new tunes, some of which haven't been heard or played for 1,000years.

With properly marked tempo, style, artistic conception and inner spirit, Gao has revived the once-lost melodies.

"I've tried my best to resurrect the art form as it is," Gao says. "Now I feel they're getting back to the way they should be."

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

 
Editor's Picks
Hot words

Most Popular
 
...
...