I picked this book up because I had read the authors A Walk Across America books> I had enjoyed them both quite a bit. I thought he gave a rather unique perspective on America because of the way he traversed the country. Based on that I hoped that this would be an interesting trip across China. Well, unfortunately it wasn't.
The book starts out with the author being invited to accompany an American expedition that was going to attempt Everest from the Tibetan side. This portion was quite interesting, chronicling, the expedition as they made their way up to the first base camp, I think it was. After that, the author parts with the expedition on his way "Across China". He heads first, by plane to Chengdu, where he meets up with his guide/interpreter, a Chinese immigrant married to an American man back in the authors home state. She had wanted to travel back home and this provided both an opportunity for her to do so, and travel with the author, helping him wind his way through China, and Chinese bureaucracy.
The author and his guide then travel up to Inner Mongolia, because he wants to stay with Mongolians and experience their life. While in was interesting, I doubt it was as exciting as he had envisioned, due to the strictness of the regime at that time. The Mongolian people were really not able to enjoy their culture as they do now. He did get to experience some of the Mongol culture, but not much.
Next was a train ride to Beijing to visit the parents of the guide, then on the Fujian. There is an interesting side quest to a fishing village (unauthorized by the government, and therefore cut short), and a bit about the art scene in Fujian before he heads back home.
The book ends with the finishing of the climbing expeditions tale, where Phil Ershler manages a solo summit of Everest. This was interesting to me, because I had gone with my uncle to hear Phil speak on his summit at San Bernardino Valley College in San Bernardino, CA shortly after his return.
This is what I thought of the book. It was written in the 80s, shortly after China had reopened to the world, so much of the information is dated, though, I would bet you could go to China today and still find many of the living conditions he experienced still today. Some of the attitudes and expressions used are obviously dated, and cringe worthy, but that was a different time, and people in the west knew little about China.
I am presuming he ran into issues, other than those noted in the book, with being able to go where he wanted, and I would assume that people would have been relatively tight lipped since the Cultural Revolution was not that far in the past. I was disappointed in the lack of scope to the book and travel, most of the book is about the climbing expedition. There is little to nothing about China itself.
While the book has some interesting points, and was probably good for its time, it falls short oif his earlier writings, and I would suspect there are a myriad of other options to read about modern day China.