Ebook Free Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang
Now, how do you recognize where to get this e-book Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang Never ever mind, now you might not visit the book shop under the intense sun or night to browse the book Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang We below always help you to find hundreds sort of e-book. Among them is this publication entitled Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang You might go to the link web page offered in this set and after that go for downloading. It will certainly not take more times. Simply connect to your internet gain access to as well as you could access guide Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang online. Certainly, after downloading Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang, you might not print it.
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang
Ebook Free Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang
Book enthusiasts, when you need a brand-new book to review, discover the book Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang here. Never worry not to find just what you require. Is the Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang your needed book currently? That's true; you are really a great viewers. This is an ideal book Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang that comes from fantastic writer to show to you. Guide Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang offers the most effective experience and lesson to take, not only take, however likewise discover.
Do you ever know guide Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang Yeah, this is a quite interesting e-book to check out. As we told previously, reading is not sort of responsibility activity to do when we have to obligate. Reviewing ought to be a routine, a good habit. By checking out Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang, you could open up the new globe and also obtain the power from the globe. Every little thing could be gotten with guide Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang Well briefly, book is extremely powerful. As what we provide you right below, this Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang is as one of reading publication for you.
By reading this publication Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang, you will obtain the very best point to acquire. The new thing that you don't have to invest over money to reach is by doing it on your own. So, exactly what should you do now? Visit the link web page and download and install guide Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang You can obtain this Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang by online. It's so very easy, right? Nowadays, modern technology actually supports you activities, this on-line book Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang, is also.
Be the initial to download this book Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang and let reviewed by surface. It is very easy to review this publication Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang due to the fact that you do not require to bring this published Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang everywhere. Your soft documents e-book can be in our gizmo or computer so you could take pleasure in checking out all over and also each time if required. This is why whole lots varieties of people additionally read guides Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang in soft fie by downloading guide. So, be one of them who take all benefits of reviewing the book Thread Of The Silkworm, By Iris Chang by on the internet or on your soft data system.
The definitive biography of Tsien Hsue-Shen, the pioneer of the American space age who was mysteriously accused of being a communist, deported, and becameto America’s continuing chagrinthe father of the Chinese missile program.
- Sales Rank: #807007 in Books
- Published on: 1996-11-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.00" h x .87" w x 6.00" l, 1.00 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 352 pages
From Library Journal
Few Americans remember Tsien Hsue-shen, the subject of this book. Born in China in 1911, he came to the United States during the 1930s, earned a Ph.D. at Caltech, and made major contributions to aeronautics, rocketry, and other fields. After applying for U.S. citizenship in the 1950s, however, he became an innocent target of the Red Scare and was deported. Then, instead of assuming the leadership role in America's missile and space programs for which he appeared destined, he helped create the Chinese missile and space program that later supplied the Third World with Silkworm missiles. Tsien's incredible life is the story of one of the greatest blunders ever made by the U.S. government. Chang's biography ranges across the histories of rocketry, aeronautics, nuclear weapons development, and U.S.- China relations. With Anna Fields's energetic reading, this fascinating book would make a can't-miss addition to any general audiobook collection.AKent Rasmussen, Thousand Oaks, CA
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From the Back Cover
Thread of the Silkworm tells the story of one of the most monumental blunders the United States committed during its era of McCarthyism. It is the biography of Dr.Tsien Hsue-shen, a pioneer of the American space age who was mysteriously accused of being a Communist and deported to China, where he became-to America's continuing chagrin-the father of the Chinese missile program.
About the Author
Iris Chang lived and worked in California. She was a journalism graduate of the University of Illinois at Urbana and worked briefly as a reporter in Chicago before winning a graduate fellowship to the writing seminars program at The Johns Hopkins University. Her first book, Thread of the Silkworm (the story of Tsien Hsue-shen, father of the People’s Republic of China’s missile program) received world-wide critical acclaim. She is the recipient of the John T. and Catherine D. MacArthur Foundation’s Program on Peace and International Cooperation award, as well as major grants from the National Science Foundation, the Pacific Cultural Foundation, and the Harry Truman Library. She passed away in 2004.
Most helpful customer reviews
51 of 56 people found the following review helpful.
shines a light on a murky time in history
By Mary Tsien
I must admit a bias - HS Tsien is my grandfather's cousin. As such, this book is for me the family history that noone would tell me. For other readers, I would say that most history books concentrate on the rise of the USSR as a power, and then *poof!* there's China...how did that happen? Chang's book reveals how China's emergence on the world stage as a military power resulted from the US's own stupidity and xenophobia. My one real complaint about the book is that Chang's writing seems to drive the book to a climax at the point of Tsien's return to China, and then peeters out while she recounts China's race to the ICBM. This inconsistancy makes one feel that Chang herself had lost interest in the story, which is unfortunate. This story is fascinating enough (for anyone interested in history, not just me) to wish that the entire book had been treated with the care that Chang shows Tsien's US phase. Anyways, one leaves the story with feelings of respect and regret for what could have been. Please note that HS Tsien is still a bogeyman for the US intelligence community - he was mentioned, as Qian Xuesen, in the 1999 Cox report during the Los Alamos spy scandal. As far as I know, HS Tsien is still alive.
28 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
Meticulously researched and superbly written...
By A Customer
This is another book written by Iris Chang, author of bestseller "The Rape of Nanking". "Thread of Silkworm" told a fascinating story of a Chinese scientist, Tsien Hsue-Shen, educated in U. S. with great contribution in U. S. rocketry, was falsely accused as a communist and deported back to China in 1950's. Upon return to China, he became the father of Chinese missile program. The book was meticulously researched and superbly written. Iris Chang is a very talented writer; this is evident by this book.
42 of 53 people found the following review helpful.
Saga of a rocket scientist worthy of Hollywood
By yio
Am I inclined to believe that all foreign born or educated defense scientists (e.g., Tsien and J.R. Oppenheimer) should be presumed "seriously suspect until proven innocent"? If so, to me Chang's book would no doubt leave open the issue whether Tsien had had a Communist leaning, while he was an immigrant in the US from a Nationalist China -- before and during a 'sky rocketting' career which culminated in his roles as JPL Director/Co-Founder; MIT/CalTech full professors; American aerospace pioneer; and a top Pentagon consultant, who grilled Werner von Braun in Germany to write for the US government its report on German aeronautics/rochetry state of the art.
To answer my own question, fortunately, I am not -- at least not consciously. So, let me justify my rating.
Poignantly told with facts organized like an epic novel, Chang's story is the saga of a gifted and industrious "orphan" from endless wars and feudal corruption in China who came to Uncle Sam's neighborhood for schooling, then contributed greatly to Sam's household, but was spurned from it by house stewards for allegedly associating with "people who condone thievery"; who then continued to work hard to be useful to people who appreciated him (as his ambition had always been) in a new career which he again excelled in, after, in the only remaining option he saw, being taken in by a delighted relative Uncle Mao.
As aristocratically brilliant, and yet democratically helpful to students/colleagues he saw as diligent, "why did he embrace the wicked Uncle -- of the proletariat masses of his kins?" you might ask.
'Cuz back in Uncle Sam's household, someone made him learn the lesson "You can't fight City Hall and expect to win." How about a harder question, from someone who has actually lived under a Fascist or Communist government?
One minor warning, though: Perhaps due to her bilingual upbringing, Chang's sentences are sometimes a bit long and not as colloquial as an impatient American reader might expect of a good novel. I won't throw rocks in my own glass house; so, to me, this quirk does not detract from the book in the slightest. Bear with her through limited technical discussions, and enjoy!
Remember Pygmalion in Greek mythology? A king could love the statue of a female figure so much that she came to life, to fall in love with him? If Tsien was innocent of the charge against him in the 50's America (you be the judge after reading Chang's book), isn't Tsien's "second life" as the leader of the successful Chinese ICBM project a modern-day antithesis of Pygmalion. Only this is not a mythical story, but real events which someday (with a chance however remote) may end disastrously for people on both shores of the Northern Pacific!
As Chang told us, the decent and kind, President Carter in the 80's by executive decree rescinded the INS order of the 50's for deporting Tsien (in essence saying, "Oops, we made a mistake.") Tsien however is still waiting for someone in the US government to give a forthright official apology for having ungraciously kicked him out while he was a guest in Uncle Sam's house, as he said so essentially (leaving it for others to remember his extraordinary contributions). Before then, he would not accept CalTech's invitation to come to California for awards of "Distinguished Teacher" and "Distinguished Alumnus."
Do most Americans who have read this book think the Communist charge against Tsien unwarranted (as President Carter must have, by his rescission decree)? If so, is it consistent with America's ideal of decency for some interested/concerned Americans to seek to make peace for their country with an aging ex-friend whom it turned enemy, and is it consistent with the US interest, in so doing, to disarm or merely soften whatever hostility toward USA his work may have bequeathed to his students and associates in China?
Whether these issues can be resolved positively with effective actions, before Tsien's death (in the challenging backdrop of the Cox Report) will determine if the American and Chinese saga of Tsien Shue-sen will come to a happier ending, or will forever remain a most poignant tragedy in the modern history of Science and Politics.
Many thanks, Iris, for helping us understand.
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang PDF
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang EPub
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang Doc
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang iBooks
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang rtf
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang Mobipocket
Thread Of The Silkworm, by Iris Chang Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar