Recenzii
A compelling look at the small island caught between Chinese power and the vagaries of US politics . . . As Brown shows so compellingly, anyone who thinks the Taiwan problem can be easily solved probably hasn't thought about it for long enough -- Bill Emmott ― Financial Times
An erudite primer . . . Brown's mission to educate westerners about Taiwan and why it matters is a critical one, which makes this book well worth reading -- Josh Glancy ― Sunday Times
Kerry Brown has produced an authoritative primer to all things Taiwan – in eminently readable prose he tells how an island once dismissed by the Qing dynasty emperor Kangxi as a “mud ball in the sea” was transformed into a raucous democracy and economic powerhouse, as well as one of the most contested lands in the world. Brown covers how it started, how it’s going and above all, why it is urgent that we all care -- Barbara Demick, author of Nothing to Envy
A passionate defence of the “unglamorous” and vague diplomatic fudge that, for half a century, characterised the uncomfortable triangular relationship between China, Taiwan and American. It’s precisely this ambiguity, Brown argues, that has kept the peace until now . . . Invaluable -- Cindy Yu ― Daily Telegraph
Kerry Brown is one of our most perceptive and accurate foreign observers of China -- John Simpson
Brown reveals Taiwan to his readers as a place of fascinating pluralism . . . a clear-sighted assessment of international trade-offs that govern its people’s fate -- Christopher Harding ― Spectator
A persuasive work of geopolitical analysis . . . A sober and fair-minded appraisal of the seemingly intractable stand-off that could bring economic and political disaster to the world in the event of escalation -- Oliver Farry ― Irish Times
Few of us pay enough attention to what’s happening in the Taiwan Strait. Kerry Brown wants to change that . . . Brown passionately – and to my mind, rationally – defends ambiguity as the best stance -- Linda Jaivin ― The Saturday Paper
Anyone with a care to avoid a third world war – between China and the US – should read this book. It’s succinct, cogent and thoughtful. It makes the unfashionable, but crucial and, in my view, unarguable case for continuing an approach of ‘strategic ambiguity’ towards Taiwan’s international position. Kerry Brown has the added merit of knowing what he’s talking about. He’s lived and breathed China all his adult life -- Jack Straw, British Foreign Secretary 2001–2006
Taiwan is one of the most dangerous hotspots in the world. This is a highly readable account of its history and the parameters of the present crisis, written with great knowledge, passion, and insight by someone who has followed Taiwan very closely for many years. Whether he is right, only time will tell. -- Martin Jacques, author of When China Rules the World
The Taiwan Story tells it as it is, an East–West confrontation-in-the-making more incendiary than Ukraine. Using his previous works on modern China to good effect, Kerry Brown explores the double thinking behind the current stand-off between Washington, Beijing and Taipei. Insoluble, unsustainable and fraught with the unforeseeable consequences, the status quo is yet preferable to an otherwise imminent conflagration. Read Brown and be warned -- John Keay
A thorough and nuanced analysis of Taiwan’s history, present and potential future -- Michael Booth, author of The Almost Nearly Perfect People
A British sinologist of great standing -- Kevin Rudd ― Financial Times
Kerry Brown has written a gripping, urgently needed overview of one of the most crucial disputes in the world, the question of Taiwan. He shows us how a crisis could unfold – and how it can be avoided. The stakes of course could not be higher, and this book is a must-read for all who are concerned about the current state of our dangerous world, indeed the future of our planet -- Michael Wood, author of The Story of China
If you want to understand the twenty-first century, you need to understand Taiwan. And if you want to understand Taiwan, you need to read this book. A compelling synthesis of the issue by an expert in the field -- Elliot Ackerman, author of The Fifth Act: America’s End in Afghanistan
Kerry Brown’s The Taiwan Story is a factual, thoughtful and very well-written account of Taiwan at a crucial time not just for the Taiwanese, but for all of us. The book’s subtitle – How a Small Island Will Dictate the Global Future – could not be more apposite. The book explains, with great clarity, both why and how -- Sir Malcolm Rifkind, former Foreign Secretary
An excellent introduction for those newly curious about Taiwan and a handy refresher or useful reference for more seasoned readers -- William Hurst, Chong Hua Professor, University of Cambridge
The Taiwan Story is an excellent account of a complex issue that is commonly misunderstood. The style is accessible, and the combination of political and historical context with on-the-spot observations is superb. Completely up-to-date, it presents information from the Taiwan side of the China–Taiwan conflict that is not readily available. This is the best introduction for anyone trying to understand this conflict -- Michael Dillon, author of We Need To Talk About Xi
For those involved or just interested in international affairs, this is a readable and balanced primer on probably the most consequential global hotspot of our century -- Sir Nigel Sheinwald, former British Ambassador to the United States
The great strength of Kerry Brown’s book is that it treats Taiwan as a place and people with their own identity, forged by their own history, linked with but also distinct from the mainland, and not just as an ‘issue’ or ‘problem’ or potential ‘flashpoint’. Taiwan is of course all these things as well, but it is impossible to grasp any of these meanings let alone manage them without understanding the layers of complexity that define the idea of Taiwan. No one with an interest in international relations can ignore Taiwan. By exposing the complexities and ambiguities of the idea of Taiwan clearly, empathically but objectively, Brown has done a great service to readers everywhere.’ -- Bilahari Kausikan, former Permanent Secretary of the Singapore Foreign Ministry