
This was all pretty interesting, but I don't particularly recommend the book. Useful lens on 20th-century China, starting with the travails of the 1940s - famine, Japanese incursion, revolution, etc. Then the Mao era - with ridiculous, lethal policies abounding. Political winds shift course as the leadership encourages cultural revolution, living in the countryside, anti-bourgeois, profit-seeking, then backs off, etc., over the course of the years.
We are somewhat aware of the mass starvation under Mao's agricultural "policies" but this book did tend to bring home the concept of hunger - the author's mother would go out to wheat fields after they were harvested and crawl around on hands and knees trying to find grains that had been missed. These folks weren't in direct danger of starvation - but, wow.
The main story line rather dragged given that Grandma lived on for about 20 years after requesting the coffin, outliving her "filial" son; and the eldest grandson (author) was away when she died, so he missed out as well.
Quick read, useful insights, not that great. China is really, really different than anything in my experience.
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