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Picture of a book: Last Days of the Mighty Mekong
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Picture of a book: Sông
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Sông

Đây là tiểu thuyết đầu tay của nhà văn Nguyễn Ngọc Tư với sự đổi mới toàn diện của chính cô. Đẹp. Đáo để. Trần tục và hư ảo. Truyện kết thúc bằng dấu chấm hỏi về số phận một con người - Không hề do dự, cô đã đẩy mầm ý tưởng vừa nhú lên sang tay người đọc, để họ nuôi dưỡng chúng, bằng trải nghiệm qua việc đọc cuốn sách này."... Sài Gòn. Sáng nay ở đó Tú dậy, đánh răng rồi chở vợ ra đường, họ có thể cùng ăn sáng trước khi đến cơ quan. Sáng nay ở đó Hậu, Bách, Cường tiểu thơ vẫn còn nằm ngầy ngật trong hơi men vì nhậu nhẹt khuya. Sáng nay mẹ cậu mặc quần lửng, giày thể thao, đá cầu ở công viên xong thì xõa tóc ngồi quán cà phê với một trong những người đàn ông của bà, cũng có thể là cha cậu.Sáng nay cậu cùng một người không thể gọi là lạ, cũng không thể nói đã quá biết nhau, đi xuyên qua những cánh rừng tinh linh đi tìm những khe suối nằm đâu đó giữa những vách đá. Hai thằng người bụi bặm và trông hơi tàn tạ…Khi mặt trời biến hai cái bóng thành vũng tối dưới chân, bọn cậu đã tận mắt nhìn thấy một vài cái khe nhỏ nước chảy cùng một thứ rêu óng biếc. Hứng mãi nước mới đầy một vốc tay, cậu không thể hình dung có bao nhiêu dòng chảy re rắt như vầy để làm tràn đầy hồ Thiên, khiến nó không khô cạn dù bất cứ mùa nắng hạn nào. Cậu xòe những ngón tay chắn giữa khe, thấy nước ẩn nhẩn lách qua, nhỏ nhắn và xanh xao như một hồn ma sầu muộn. Không thể tin được những nhánh nước rủ rỉ này lại làm nên dòng chảy hàng ngàn dặm của sông Di...."(trích tiểu thuyết Sông)
Picture of a book: Connect: How Companies Succeed by Engaging Radically with Society
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Connect: How Companies Succeed by Engaging Radically with Society

Why being radically connected with society is not just the right thing to do, it is an imperative for a company's bottom lineBased on John Browne's decades of experience as one of the world's most successful and innovative CEOs, with research by McKinsey & Company, Connect is a practical manifesto that redefines the role of business in society.Through insightful analysis and vivid storytelling—ranging from ancient China, Andrew Carnegie and the Homestead Strike of the late nineteenth century, to oil spills and privacy issues emanating from the technology of the twenty–first—Connect explores the recurring rift between business and society and proposes a way in which companies can prosper by connecting with the world around them.There is an enormous prize for leaders who engage creatively and constructively with society, and who make its needs part of their company's business model. The evidence presented in Connect shows that the value of radical connection amounts to 30 percent of corporate earnings. The shares of companies that connect outperform those of competitors by 2 percent every year, amounting to a performance boost of 20 percent over a decade.Connect rejects stale ideas about corporate social responsibility disconnected from commercial activity and from the needs of real people. It identifies four tenets of “connected leadership,” a radical new paradigm that shows how companies and executives can thrive by close engagement with society.
Picture of a book: Luc Xi: Prostitution and Venereal Disease in Colonial Hanoi
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Luc Xi: Prostitution and Venereal Disease in Colonial Hanoi

What does it mean when a city of 180,000 people has more than 5,000 women working as prostitutes? This question frames Vu Trong Phung's 1937 classic reportage Luc Xi. In the late 1930s, Hanoi had a burgeoning commercial sex industry that involved thousands of people and hundreds of businesses. It was the centre of the city's nightlife and the source of suffering, violence, exploitation, and a venereal disease epidemic. For Phung, a popular writer and intellectual, it also raised disturbing questions about the state of Vietnamese society and culture and whether his country really was ""progressing"" under French colonial rule. Translator Shaun Kingsley Malarney's thoughtful and multifaceted introduction provides historical background on colonialism, prostitution, and venereal disease in Vietnam and discusses reportage as a literary genre, political tool, and historical source. A fully annotated translation of Luc Xi follows, in which Phung takes readers into the heart of colonial Hanoi's sex industry, portraying its female workers, the officials who attempted to regulate it, the doctors who treated its victims, and the secretive medical facility known as the Nha Luc Xi (""The Dispensary""), which examined prostitutes for venereal diseases and held them for treatment. Drawing from his interviews with doctors, officials, and prostitutes and the writings of French doctors on prostitution and venereal disease, Phung provides a rare, firsthand look at the damage caused by the commercial sex industry. His sympathetic portrayal of the Vietnamese underclass is considered one of the most accurate, but he also provides one of the most acerbic, humorous, and critical views of the changes wrought by colonialism in Southeast Asia.
Picture of a book: A Greater Music
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A Greater Music

"Bae Suah offers the chance to unknow—to see the everyday afresh and be defamiliarized with what we believe we know—which is no small offering."—Sophie Hughes, Music & LiteratureNear the beginning of A Greater Music, the narrator, a young Korean writer, falls into an icy river in the Berlin suburbs, where she's been housesitting for her on-off boyfriend Joachim. This sets into motion a series of memories that move between the hazily defined present and the period three years ago when she first lived in Berlin. Throughout, the narrator's relationship with Joachim, a rough-and-ready metalworker, is contrasted with her friendship with M, an ultra-refined music-loving German teacher, whom, it is suggested, later became her lesbian lover.A novel of memories and wandering, A Greater Music blends riffs on music, language, and literature with a gut-punch of an emotional ending, establishing Bae Suah as one of the most exciting novelists working today.Bae Suah, one of the most highly acclaimed contemporary Korean authors, has published more than a dozen works and won several prestigious awards. She has also translated several books from the German, including works by W. G. Sebald, Franz Kafka, and Jenny Erpenbeck. Her first book to appear in English, Nowhere to be Found, was longlisted for a PEN Translation Prize.Deborah Smith's literary translations from the Korean include two novels by Han Kang (The Vegetarian and Human Acts), and two by Bae Suah, (A Greater Music and Recitation).
Picture of a book: Overbooked: The Exploding Business of Travel and Tourism
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Overbooked: The Exploding Business of Travel and Tourism

Elizabeth Becker
The largest global business in the world today is tourism. Employing one out of twelve people in the world and producing $6.5 trillion of the world’s economy, it is the main source of income for many countries. Elizabeth Becker describes the dimensions of this industry and its huge effect on the world economy, the environment, and our culture. Tourism, fast becoming the largest global business, employs one out of twelve persons and produces $6.5 trillion of the world’s economy. In a groundbreaking book, Elizabeth Becker uncovers how what was once a hobby has become a colossal enterprise with profound impact on countries, the environment, and cultural heritage. This invisible industry exploded at the end of the Cold War. In 2012 the number of tourists traveling the world reached one billion. Now everything can be packaged as a tour: with the high cost of medical care in the U.S., Americans are booking a vacation and an operation in countries like Turkey for a fraction of the cost at home. Becker travels the world to take the measure of the business: France invented the travel business and is still its leader; Venice is expiring of over-tourism. In Cambodia, tourists crawl over the temples of Angkor, jeopardizing precious cultural sites. Costa Rica rejected raising cattle for American fast-food restaurants to protect their wilderness for the more lucrative field of eco-tourism. Dubai has transformed a patch of desert in the Arabian Gulf into a mammoth shopping mall. Africa’s safaris are thriving, even as its wildlife is threatened by foreign poachers. Large cruise ships are spoiling the oceans and ruining city ports as their American-based companies reap handsome profits through tax loopholes. China, the giant, is at last inviting tourists and sending its own out in droves. The United States, which invented some of the best of tourism, has lost its edge due to political battles. Becker reveals travel as product. Seeing the tourism industry from the inside out, through her eyes and ears, we experience a dizzying range of travel options though very few quiet getaways. Her investigation is a first examination of one of the largest and potentially most destructive enterprises in the world.