Mao's Last Dancer (Young Readers' Edition)
โ Scribed by Cunxin, Li
- Book ID
- 109785722
- Publisher
- Walker Books
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1 MB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780802728128
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
At the age of eleven, Li Cunxin was one of the privileged few selected to serve in Chairman Mao's Cultural Revolution by studying at the Beijing Dance Academy. Having known bitter poverty in his rural China home, ballet would be his family's best chance for a better future. From one hardship to another, Cunxin demonstrated perseverance and an appetite for success that led him to be chosen as one of the first two people to leave Mao's China and go to American to dance on a special cultural exchange. But life in the U.S. was nothing like his communist indoctrination had led him to believe. Ultimately, he defected to the west in a dramatic media storm, and went on to dance with the Houston Ballet for sixteen years.
This inspiring story of passion, resilience, and a family's love captures the harsh reality of life in Mao's communist China and the exciting world of professional dance. This compelling memoir includes photos documenting Li's extraordinary life.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
From a desperately poor village in northeast China, at age eleven, Li Cunxin was chosen by Madame Mao's cultural delegates to be taken from his rural home and brought to Beijing, where he would study ballet. In 1979, the young dancer arrived in Texas as part of a cultural exchange, only to fall in l
**THE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER The extraordinary memoir of a peasant boy raised in rural Maoist China who was plucked from his village to study ballet and went on to become one of the greatest dancers of his generation. ** From a desperately poor village in northeast China, at age eleven, Li Cun
**A heartwarming story of a stray dog and a U.S. Marine who met under the unlikeliest circumstances in Afghanistan --and who changed each other's lives forever. ** As part of an elite team of Marines, Craig Grossi was sent on his most dangerous assignment to the Sangin District of Afghanistan. He e