Available Formats
Chinese Rules: Maos Dog, Dengs Cat, and Five Timeless Lessons for Understanding China
By (Author) Tim Clissold
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
23rd October 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
332.673092
Hardback
272
500g
From the author of the acclaimed Mr China' comes another rip-roaring adventure story part memoir, part history, part business imbroglio that offers valuable lessons to help Westerners understand China.
Clissolds attempt to encapsulate how China works in five neat rules is well timed fans of Clissolds first book will find plenty of only-in-China tales from the authors reincarnation as a carbon credit entrepreneur His amusing anecdotes illustrate some of the rules he sets out for foreigners mystified by China Formidable storytelling An entertaining and valuable book Financial Times
Praise for Mr China:
Clissolds memoir is an instant classic. Sharply observed, funny as hell. Indispensible Time
Its got big money, charismatic capitalists, Communist apparatchiks, crime and mysterious disappearances [but] its not just a novel its true. Daily Telegraph
A wonderful read one might not expect such poetry from a banker New York Times
Hugely entertaining Clissold loves China but he also views it with clarity and no small amount of humour Washington Post
Delightful this trenchant, immensely entertaining study in the contradictions of Chinese capitalism should be required reading Fortune Magazine
One would be hard-pressed to find a serious Western investor in China who isnt aware of Clissolds eye-opening account Forbes
No business history can ever have been such an enjoyable read any visiting businessman should be obliged to buy a copy Chris Patten, the last governor of Hong Kong
Tim Clissold was educated at Cambridge University and lived and worked in China for more than twenty years. He co-founded a private equity group, spent time with an international bank recovering distressed assets, and more recently, started a business that invests in greenhouse gas emission reduction projects in China through the UNs Clean Development Mechanism. He is the author of Mr China, which was translated into twelve languages and was one of the Economists books of the year.