Three Tigers, One Mountain: A Journey through the Bitter History and Current Conflicts of China, Korea and Japan

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Description

‘The next Bill Bryson’ New York TimesTwo tigers cannot share the same mountain – Chinese proverbDespite geographical proximity, cultural similarities, and shared status as highly powerful nations, China, Korea and Japan love to hate each other. Why?In search of an answer, Michael Booth journeys across East Asia to explore the mutual animosity that frequently threatens to draw the world into all-out war. From misjudged cake decorations to electoral meddling, contradictory origin myths to territorial disputes, this deeply researched and hugely entertaining book shows that no conflict is too small to keep the fires of neighbourly hostility burning.’A fine summary of East Asian cultures and conflicts…useful, fact-packed and readable’ Spectator

Additional information

Weight 0.293 kg
Dimensions 2.2 × 12.9 × 19.8 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

368

Publisher

Year Published

2021-1-14

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

1784704245

About The Author

Michael Booth is the author of six books, including the international bestseller, The Almost Nearly Perfect People, winner of the British Guild of Travel Writers award for Book of the Year, and Sushi and Beyond, which won the Guild of Food Writers award.

Review Quote

In this enjoyable and information-packed travelogue…[Booth] is a terrific observer… his chatty style disarms his subjects and entertains the reader. It is a hard act to pull off when dealing with tragedy. His deft, accurate summaries of the contentious history in each place work well.

Other text

Three Tigers, One Mountain is a fine summary of East Asian cultures and conflicts, with a chummy, affable tone and profound interest in its subject… useful, fact-packed and readable.