Lost on Planet China: One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation

Lost on Planet China: One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation
by J. Maarten Troost

Lost on Planet China: One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation
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Book Summary Information

Author: J. Maarten Troost
Edition: Paperback
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2009-05-12
ISBN: 0767922018
Number of pages: 400
Publisher: Broadway

Book Reviews of Lost on Planet China: One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation

Book Review: Laugh, perhaps even giggle while you wander across Maarten Troost's China
Summary: 5 Stars

Over the past two decades I guess I've read 30 or 40 books about various author's China adventures. Some have left me wanting far more details, others offered discourses akin to a dissertation but Lost on Planet China: One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nationkept me totally involved across all 382 of its pages!

In addition to having experienced almost all of Taiwan's numerous attractions, geography, people, and institutions, I've trekked from Urumqi to Harbin, Yun-Chuan to Yi Ancient City and across and back the breadth of much of China. My China treks began in the mid-80's and even now are an annual event. This time, however, as I was flying from Orlando to San Francisco and onward to Shanghai, I took Troost's book with me, having quickly purchased it from my friendly Amazon supplier.

I was seated in the upper deck next to a distinguished gentleman of Asian heiritage as we winged our way across the Pacific. The more I began reading Troost's book the more difficult it was to retain even a remote semblence of civility. It began with a silent smile and a mental "right on!" By the time I had reached Chapter 3 I was snickering softly. In the middle of that chapter I lost it entirely and started to laugh uncontrollaby! Suffice to say, reading this bnook was extreme fun and...one filled with extreme pathos as well.

Troost takes us into the pathway of "ladies of the night" (and day), to sleazy hotel lobbies wherein kids pee in ash trays in front of the world, and to silent and sobbing descendents of the "Nanjing Rape." He gives us glimpses of helter-skelter city streets, international botiques, buses laden with Tibetan pilgrims passing along side of their peer supplicants crawling toward Lhasa on hands and knees. He shares the sheer terror of scaling the edges of rock cliffs with nothing but swirling currents and jagged rocks hundreds of feet below. He goes into the true "heart of darkness" into a China that few of we mere mortals would dare to go, always questioning, commenting upon, and sharing his amazement of what he is experiencing.

Troost doesn't polish this Chinese apple easily, rather, he peels it layer upon layer, like an onion that varies from being sweet and solid to the stench of rotting flesh. It is truly an adventurous read. On balance, what is left is the wonder, the hilarity, especially that shared as he explores the drug-laden streets of selected hamlets in Yunnan Province. He has no qualms about commenting as to how he feels about human rights, politics, equity, and other items on his list of social ills, and what he writes rings true. Just ask some of the friends you may make if eventually you find yourself returning time and time again to continue your own China 101 class.

By now the man sitting next to me, trying his best to ignore my escalating comedic cues accompanied by gasps of surprise and sorrow, was curious. I told him I was reading a book about the "real" China, one that only one who'd been there-done that, would have appreciated. While he was an American-born Asian, he'd be making one of his very few trips to his homeland this time and professed he knew comparatively little about his counmtry. Seeing the delight on my face he noted the title and promised to order the book upon his return to America. I truly hope he enjoys the trip upon which Maarten Troost takes him!

Summary of Lost on Planet China: One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation

The bestselling author of The Sex Lives of Cannibals returns with a sharply observed, hilarious account of his adventures in China?a complex, fascinating country with enough dangers and delicacies to keep him, and readers, endlessly entertained.

Maarten Troost has charmed legions of readers with his laugh-out-loud tales of wandering the remote islands of the South Pacific. When the travel bug hit again, he decided to go big-time, taking on the world?s most populous and intriguing nation. In Lost on Planet China, Troost escorts readers on a rollicking journey through the new beating heart of the modern world, from the megalopolises of Beijing and Shanghai to the Gobi Desert and the hinterlands of Tibet.

Lost on Planet China
finds Troost dodging deadly drivers in Shanghai; eating Yak in Tibet; deciphering restaurant menus (offering local favorites such as Cattle Penis with Garlic); visiting with Chairman Mao (still dead, very orange); and hiking (with 80,000 other people) up Tai Shan, China?s most revered mountain. But in addition to his trademark gonzo adventures, the book also delivers a telling look at a vast and complex country on the brink of transformation that will soon shape the way we all work, live, and think. As Troost shows, while we may be familiar with Yao Ming or dim sum or the cheap, plastic products that line the shelves of every store, the real China remains a world?indeed, a planet--unto itself.

Maarten Troost brings China to life as you?ve never seen it before, and his insightful, rip-roaringly funny narrative proves that once again he is one of the most entertaining and insightful armchair travel companions around.
Amazon Best of the Month, July 2008: Maarten Troost is a laowai (foreigner) in the Middle Kingdom, ill-equipped with a sliver of Mandarin, questing to discover the "essential Chineseness" of an ancient and often mystifying land. What he finds is a country with its feet suctioned in the clay of traditional culture and a head straining into the polluted stratosphere of unencumbered capitalism, where cyclopean portraits of Chairman Mao (largely perceived as mostly good, except for that nasty bit toward the end) spoon comfortably with Hong Kong's embrace of rat-race modernity. From Beijing and its blitzes of flying phlegm--and girls who lend new meaning to "Chinese take-out"--to the legendary valley of Shangri-La (as officially designated by the Party), Troost learns that his very survival may hinge on his underdeveloped haggling skills and a willingness to deploy Rollerball-grade elbows over a seat on a train. Featuring visits to Mao's George Hamiltonian corpse and a rural market offering Siberian Tiger paw, cobra hearts, and scorpion kebabs (in the food section), Lost on Planet China is a funny and engrossing trip across a nation that increasingly demands the world's attention. --Jon Foro

Maarten Troost's Travel Tips for China

1. Food can be classified as meat, poultry, grain, fish, fruit, vegetable and Chinese. Embrace the Chinese. If you love it, it will love you back. True, you may find yourself perplexed by what resides on your plate. You may even be appalled. The Chinese have an expression: We eat everything with four legs except the table, and anything with two legs except the person. They mean it too. And so you may find yourself in a restaurant in Guangzhou contemplating the spicy cow veins; or the yak dumplings in Lhasa, or the grilled frog in Shanghai, or the donkey hotpot in the Hexi Corridor, or the live squid on the island of Putuoshan. And you may not know, exactly, what it is you?re supposed to do. Should you pluck at this with your chopsticks? The meal may seem so very strange. True, you may be comfortable eating a cow, or a pig, or a chicken, yet when confronted with a yak or a swan or a cat, you do not reflexively think of sauces and marinades. The Chinese do however. And so you should eat whatever skips across your table. It is here where you can experience the complexity of China. And you will be rewarded. Very often, it is exceptionally good. And when it is not, it is undoubtedly interesting. And really, when traveling what more can one ask for. So go on. Eat as the locals do. However, should you find yourself confronted with a heaping platter of Cattle Penis with Garlic, you?re on your own.

2. To really see China, go to the market. Any market will do. This is where China lives and breathes. It is here where you will find the sights, sounds and smells of China. And it is in a Chinese market where you will experience epic bargaining. The Chinese excel at bargaining. They live and breathe it. It is an art; it is a sport. It is, above all, nothing personal. If you do not parry back and forth, you will be regarded as a chump, a walking ATM machine, a carcass to be picked over. And so as you peruse the cabbage or consider the silk, be prepared to bargain. The objective, of course, is to obtain the Chinese price. You will, however, never actually receive the Chinese price. It is the holy grail for laowais--or foreigners--in China. Your status as a laowai is determined by how proximate your haggling gets you to the mythical Chinese price. But you will never obtain the Chinese price. Accept this. But if you?re very, very good, and you bargain long and hard, and if you are lucky and catch your interlocutor on an off day, you may, just may, receive the special price. Consider yourself fortunate.

3. Travelers are often told to get off the beaten path, to take the road less traveled, to march to a different drum. You don't need to do this in China. The road well-traveled is a very fine road. The French Concession in Shanghai is splendid. The Forbidden City is a wonder of the world. So too the Terracotta Warriors in Xi'an. Indeed, the Chinese say so themselves. There is much to be seen in places that are often seen. And yet... China is not merely a country. It is not a place defined by sights. It is a world upon itself, a different planet even. And to see it--to feel it--means leaving that well-traveled road. And China is an excellent place for wandering. From the monasteries of Tibet to the rainforests of Yunnan Province and onward through the deserts of Xinjiang to the frozen tundra of Heilongjiang Province, China offers a vast kaleidoscope of people and terrain unlike anywhere else on Earth. This may seem intimidating to the China traveler. Will there be picture menus in the Taklamakan Desert? (No.) Is Visa accepted in Inner Mongolia? (Not likely.) Still, one should move beyond the Great Wall. And if you can manage to cross six lanes of traffic in Beijing, you can manage the slow train to Kunming.

4. Hell is a line in China. You are so forewarned.

5. Manners are important in China. How can this be, you wonder? You have, for instance, experienced a line in China. Your ribs have been pummeled. You have been trampled upon by grandmothers who are not more than four feet tall. You have learned, simply by queuing in the airport taxi line, what it is like to eat bitter, an evocative Chinese expression that conveys suffering. This does not seem upon first impression to be a country overly concerned with prim etiquette. But it is. True, hawking enormous, gelatinous loogies is perfectly acceptable in China. And a good belch is fine as well. And picking your teeth after dinner is a sign of urbane sophistication. But this does not mean that manners are not taken seriously in China. It?s just that they are different in China. And so feel free to spit and burp, but do not even think of holding your chopsticks with your left hand. You will be regarded as an ill-mannered rube. So watch your manners in China. But learn them first.


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