A very large Ferris Wheel at the southern end of Shanghai. Dusty Venus — most of the dust is a result of construction/demolition.
This little boy was making so much noise that at first I thought his life was in danger, but he was simply one of those kids who is very loud while having a [...]
Li ShiMin’s Horses (a.k.a. Emperor Tang TaiZong)
A colleague here in Nanjing said that he finds most famous tourist sites in China “underwhelming”. The Chinese somehow manage to take a relic or site that has an interesting story behind it and turn it into trivia and platitudes. I don’t know how the process works, but they [...]
Book Reviews at a Shanghai Bookstore
This bookstore orders most of its history books from the same few publishers, so it’s a good place to learn about the incestuous world of writers and those who write book reviews. Writers sometimes cluster into groups that review and promote each other’s books. The author of this book is [...]
china, villages, fishing, boats
Between Taiping and Liujiacun (怮, 隸模游, two little Min River towns), I passed some guys burning their fields, then came to an abandoned lumber mill that was now being used to store coal. Behind this was a clan temple. While snooping around the clan temple, the backboard came into view, and so I climbed [...]
Aqua City!
One of the newest and best-funded shopping malls in Nanjing is called Aqua City (shuiyoucheng). In tribute to the canal culture of Nanjing and the entire Yangzi Delta, long waterways loop around the stores, connecting several ponds with fountains of colorful, dancing water. One of the fountains has a stage in the middle. The [...]
Food Signs – Gaoyang Restaurant in Yinchuan
Food Signs – Pingliang 1
Food Signs – Pingliang 2
Food Signs – Pingliang 3
Food Signs – Pingliang 4
Food Signs – Pingliang 5
Food Signs – Pingliang 6
Food Signs – Yinchuan 1
Food Signs – Yinchuan 2
Food Signs – Yinchuan 3
Food Signs – Yinchuan 4
The first photo shows XiXia or Tangut script next to an older carving of some nomad’s deity; the script is sort of a Buddhist commentary on the earlier image.
The XiXia script has to date between the early 11th century and 1227, when Genghis Khan’s army took vengeance on those duplicitous Tanguts. The script looks pretty [...]
Beijing from an office window.
Loess is the main reason for Beijing’s haze. When the sky looks milky where there are no clouds, and the haze is consistent from the ground to the tops of skyscrapers, this is loess.
I pronounce it Lois–how ’bout you?
I had to [...]
Visitors are seemingly allowed to take photos everywhere in China now, including at such places as museums and the terra cotta warrior pits, so I have hundreds of technically illegal photos.
Back when most tourists in China were foreigners, our tour groups would arrive at the terra cotta army exhibit, the local guide would [...]