Peter Hessler is a staff writer at The New Yorker, where he served as the Beijing correspondent from 2000 to 2007, and is also a contributing writer for National Geographic. He is the author of River Town, which won the Kiriyama Prize; Oracle Bones, which was a finalist for the National Book Award; and, most recently, Country Driving. He won the 2008 National Magazine Award for excellence in reporting, and he was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2011. He lives in Cairo.
Biography
Peter Hessler, one of four children, was born in 1969, in Pittsburgh, but moved shortly thereafter to Columbia, Missouri. His father is a recently retired professor of sociology at the University of Missouri, and his mother teaches history at Columbia College.
Hessler attended Princeton University, where he majored in English and Creative Writing. The summer before graduation, he worked as a researcher for the Kellogg Foundation in southeastern Missouri, where he wrote a long ethnography about a small town called Sikeston. This became his first significant publication, appearing in the Journal for Applied Anthropology.
In 1992, Hessler entered Oxford University, where he studied English Language and Literature at Mansfield College. After graduating in 1994, he traveled for six month in Europe and Asia. One of the highlights of that trip was taking the trans-Siberian train from Moscow to Beijing. That journey resulted in his first published travel story, an essay that appeared in The New York Times in 1995. And that journey was his first introduction to China.
He spent the following year freelancing and attempting to write a book about his travels. Although the book didn't work out, he was able to publish travel stories in a range of newspapers, including The New York Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Washington Post, and The Newark Star-Ledger, among others. In 1995, he received the Stratton Fellowship, a grant from the Friends of Switzerland and spent two months hiking 650 miles across the Alps. Afterwards he continued to freelance, writing travel stories for American newspapers while teaching freshman composition at the University of Missouri. He also organized volunteer projects for students on campus.
In 1996 he joined the Peace Corps and was sent to China. For two years, he taught English at a small college in Fuling, a city on the Yangtze River. While living in Fuling, he studied Mandarin Chinese and became proficient in the language.
After completing his Peace Corps service in 1998, he traveled to Tibet, where he researched a long article, "Tibet Through Chinese Eyes," which appeared in the Atlantic Monthly in February of 1999. Following that trip, he returned to Missouri and wrote River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze. While working on the book, he continued to write travel stories for The New York Times and other newspapers. In March of 1999, Hessler decided to return to China independently and try to establish himself as a freelance writer.
Over the following years, he traveled widely in China and freelanced for a variety of publications. For a brief spell, he was accredited as the Boston Globe stringer in Beijing. In 2000, The New Yorker began publishing some of his stories; the following year, he became the first New Yorker correspondent to be accredited as a full-time resident correspondent in the People's Republic.
In 2000, Hessler also started researching stories for National Geographic Magazine. The first assignment was a story about Xi'an archaeology, which sparked his interest in researching antiquities. Subsequently he accepted an assignment for a story about China's bronze-age cultures, which led to his interest of the oracle bones of the Anyang excavations.
River Town was published in 2001. It won the Kiriyama Prize for outstanding nonfiction book about the Pacific Rim and South Asia. It was also a finalist for the Barnes & Noble Discover award, and in the United Kingdom it was shortlisted for the Thomas Cook Travel Book Award. The book has been translated into Korean, Thai, and Hungarian. The Hungarian translation won the Elle Literary Prize for nonfiction in 2004.
Peter Hessler's magazine stories have been selected for the Best American Travel Writing anthologies of 2001, 2004 and 2005, and also for the Best American Sports Writing anthology of 2004. "Chasing the Wall," a National Geographic story published in 2003, was nominated for a National Magazine Award.
Hessler first conceived of Oracle Bones at the end of 2001 and spent the next four years researching and writing the book.
He currently lives in Beijing.
Author biography courtesy of HarperCollins.
Good To Know
"The only steady job I ever held in journalism was delivering the Columbia Missourian," Hessler revealed in our interview. "I knew I wanted to be a writer since I was sixteen years old. Mary Racine, who taught sophomore English at Hickman High School, first encouraged me to take writing seriously. Mary Ann Gates taught juniors and Khaki Westerfield taught seniors; they were all remarkable teachers It makes a big difference to be encouraged at such an early stage."
A New York Times Notable Book
Winner of the Kiriyama Book Prize
In the heart of China's Sichuan province, amid the terraced hills of the Yangtze River valley, lies the remote town of Fuling. Like many other small cities in this ever-evolving country, Fuling is heading down a new path of change and growth, which came into remarkably sharp focus when Peter Hessler arrived as a Peace Corps volunteer, marking the first time in more than half a century that the city had an American resident. Hessler taught English and American literature at the local college, but it was his students who taught him about the complex processes of understanding that take place when one is immersed in a radically different society.
Poignant, thoughtful, funny, and enormously compelling, River Town is an unforgettable portrait of a city that is seeking to understand both what it was and what it someday will be.
Third-place winner of Barnes & Noble's 2001 Discover Great New Writers Award for Nonfiction
發表於2024-11-22
River Town 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
本文寫於2014年9月,《奇石》在中國發售時,何偉曾受譯文齣版社之邀來到中國。 1 我有個纔華橫溢的同事,兩年前,他在報社的業務探討營(現在這種活動已經消失在曆史的長河中瞭)上推薦瞭一本書,叫作《江城》。他說:“任何有誌於從事特稿寫作的記者,都應該去看看這本書。” ...
評分原文鏈接 http://www.ilmare.cn/?p=225 看何偉(Peter Hessler)的這本書其實是一個非常愉快的過程,這本書是我的老師文中先生推薦的。拿到這本書是10月初的事情瞭。這兩個月一直斷斷續續地看著River Town,這本書算是我看過的第一本真正意義上的原版書籍。 這是一個美國人描...
評分一本《尋路中國》讓何偉在中國知識圈炙手可熱,幾乎登上瞭每一傢我所見到的媒體。這本《River Town》則記錄瞭第一次來中國時的青澀感觀。《尋路中國》之所以一石激起韆層浪,是因為他給瞭我國人一種旁觀者的視角來反躬自省,書中令我們眼前一亮、心頭一顫的論斷遍地皆是,仿佛...
評分盡管一開始就知道這本書不是死闆的社會學研究或自以為是的個人遊記,但還是沒想到會這麼好,好到在我整個看的過程中,心始終是沉著的。心沉不沉,幾乎成瞭我判彆東西好壞的唯一標準瞭。比如隨便刷一下微信朋友圈,你都能找到一韆篇鬍扯中國社會的文章,一般都無需看內容,標題...
評分我本不想讀任何寫中國的書,如同不想讀政治和哲學。對於世上的苦難,我僅覺得自己無奈無力;對於世上的精彩,也毫無吸引並不想參和;而對世道的憤怒和評判,更讓人增加瞭保持沉默的力量。你一開口便落入與他們一樣的偏見和市恩,人總是對彆人的事錶現的比自己的清楚。 無奈抱...
圖書標籤: PeterHessler 中國 遊記 何偉 英文原著 涪陵 英文原版 旅行
我愛它的真誠,愛他做為一個天主教徒,對人世間的純潔的愛。
評分印象中譯本隻刪掉瞭Tea House裏XX功中年男人,實在難得。其次PeterHessler大概不會太喜歡我這樣的學生,太不characteristically Chinese瞭...參照Rebecca
評分參照中文版看下來 是我讀完的第一本英文書 彼得海斯勒文筆很平實 沒有太復雜生僻的詞匯 所以讀起來很舒服 對照大陸版 刪節非常少 成段刪除的隻有個彆幾次 大多數情況隻是刪除個彆幾句話 或是刪除改寫個彆幾個詞。基本上還是保持瞭作者的願意。 但是最後二十頁的後記完全不一樣 中文版主要少瞭作者開列的書單 以及少瞭從《甲骨文》中挪來的一篇文章。
評分啊哈?很久以前讀的瞭,怎麼沒標記啊……我喜歡的點很奇怪——那些學英文的學生寫的有趣句子文章。
評分我愛它的真誠,愛他做為一個天主教徒,對人世間的純潔的愛。
River Town 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載