Since Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 went missing in the early hours of March 8, teams of rescue workers have been frantically searching large swaths of deep ocean to locate the Beijing-bound Boeing 777-200.
In recent months, social media sites have been deluged with posts bemoaning the decline of reading in China. But according to a new report, the harbingers of doom have been on the wrong page.
In the past 12 months, several major players in the Chinese book industry and researchers have conducted surveys into digital reading habits. Here are some of their conclusions.
"I read, but mostly I do it online. At the store, I just walk around to see what everyone else is reading."
Snow was falling in the April noonday sun, but that didn't stop people from lining up outside Abula's shop in Urumqi in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
"This is the first year of my plan to expand the company. It's important to me and to all my employees," said Abulajan Mettohot, the owner of Xinjiang Abulajan Naan Chain Co, who has set up a training program in his hometown in Yecheng county and in other two counties, Shule and Yengisar in Kashgar prefecture.
Li Lishui, 90, from Shenyang, Liaoning province, has three possession he values more than his life: A letter written in English; an old photo of a foreign soldier; and a certificate awarded to him by the United States government in appreciation of the encouragement and help he gave Allied prisoners of the Japanese during World War II.
There are many ways to record history. Because writing was prohibited in the Mukden camp, the POWs stole paper on which they drew cartoons through which they vividly recorded life in the camp and made scabrous attacks on their Japanese guards.
The first production of Shakespeare in China was staged in 1902, when, in an effort to better understand English history and language, students at Shanghai St. John College put on The Merchant of Venice - in the original language.
William Shakespeare's work has graced the Chinese page and stage for more than a century now, but the enormous breadth of his work has dazzled rather than enlightened when it's transplanted ... until now, writes Raymond Zhou.
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