
Xi Jinping
The Most Powerful Man in the World
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Narrated by:
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Peter Noble
About this listen
If China seems unstoppable, so too does its leader Xi Jinping. As general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and president of China, he commands over 1.4 billion people, in a vast country that spans the prosperous megacities of Beijing and Shanghai and desperately poor rural regions where families still struggle with malnutrition.
Today, Xi Jinping faces a series of monumental challenges that would make other global leaders tremble: a trade war with the USA, political unrest in Hong Kong, accusations of genocide in Xinjiang, stuttering economic growth, and a devastating global pandemic that originated inside China.
But who is Xi Jinping and what does he really want? To rejuvenate China and bring economic prosperity to all its people? To challenge American supremacy and turn China into the world's dominant power? Avoiding both sycophantic flattery and outright condemnation, this new biography by Stefan Aust and Adrian Geiges gets inside the head of one of the world's most mysterious leaders. Skillfully unraveling the hidden story of Xi Jinping's life and career, from his early childhood to his rise to the pinnacles of the Party and the State, they flesh out his views and uncover how he became the most powerful man in the world.
©2022 Polity Press (P)2023 TantorLike a long newspaper article based on meetings with a politician and a few trips to china
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The authors tell the story well: it was compelling throughout. Despite my overall enthusiasm about the content and writing, I found the narrator’s delivery to be somewhat robotic: he habitually chooses to end almost every sentence with a distinct falling inflexion. Used with discretion, this can lend gravitas to significant sentences. Used too often, it becomes a meaningless affectation. However, that said, this is one of the most interesting and important books I’ve listened to and I highly recommend it.
Fascinating and insightful
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Like many journalists they also fall for the temptation to write themselves into the story. Seeming quite pleased with themselves when they have managed to secure face to face interviews with important people.
It’s unclear if they did any new research specifically for this book, or whether the book only sums up their past articles and interviews on China.
Important topic but feels a bit light
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