From A Cottager's Sketchbook, Vol.1


Book Description

This collection of occasional essays is brimming with elegance and charm. With the keen eyes of an artist, the author turns homely things into interesting subjects, produces curious vignettes from the panorama of society and reflects on the deeper meanings of life. His unique sense of humor enlivens the seemingly ordinary topics.




From A Cottager's Sketchbook, Vol.2


Book Description

A Cottager's Sketchbook is a collection of informal essays written by Liang Shih-chiu over a span of more than four decades. The earliest pieces originally appeared in a weekly in the wartime capital of Chongqing and, in the subsequent articles, the author continues to ridicule human foibles and social follies. His elegant and graceful prose, enriched by his liberal use of classical quotations and literally allusions, is sprinkled with lampoons of contemporary life and culture. Volume II of this collection features pieces from the seventies and eighties. Liang's distinct style continues to shine, but these late essays reveal a mellowness that comes with age. While the poignant sarcasm subtly and slowly shifts to a benign humor, the nostalgia for his hometown becomes more and more palpable during his exile in Taiwan.




雅舍小品選集


Book Description

This is a collection of occasional essays by Liang Shih-chiu (1903-1087), the first scholar to have trenaslated the complete works of Shakespeare into Chinese. The authors turns homely things into interesting subjects, produceing curious vignettes from the panorama of society and reflects on the deeper meanings of life. In Chinese and English.




China Review


Book Description







Blog Book, Year 1, Volume 1


Book Description







Graham Clarke


Book Description