What is the most exciting job aside for being a movie or music star? Being a reporter covering the entertainment beat. You always have something to show off to your friends: Autographs and photos? I have got so tired of them. Who is your idol? Ok, I'll bring five signed albums to you tomorrow. You want an up-close view of the stars' real appearance? Who cares when I have seen them more often than my colleagues?
Twin brothers Wang Yiwen and Wang Yiwu of Beijing have been celebrating their birthdays together for 20 years. This year, there was a special guest at the party named Xiang Nan, who is of the same age.
Ever since my son's birth two years ago, I have been engaged in a losing battle against my mother over how to feed the boy. True enough, she is a great help. But sometimes I just can't agree with her.
With the light fragrance of the painting ink in the air, the Yang family was busy making 1,000 sets of woodblock-printed New Year paintings for a Hong Kong customer. Five or six of them were printing and binding paintings of figures from the Chinese classic novel A Dream of the Red Chamber. Giving instructions to them was an old man.
Nearly every time I enter a neighborhood grocery store and pick up a shopping basket, I regret deciding again to cobble together a meal on my own. As quickly as possible, I weave in and out of the labyrinth of shelves and freezers, careful not to disturb animals hanging from hooks and shop staff staring off into space.
Wu Song Kills a Tiger (Wu Song Da Hu) is a classical tale of Shandong kuaishu and one of Eric Shepherd's favorites. It is a lively rendition of an excerpt from Outlaws of the Marsh, one of the four classical novels of Chinese literature, which is a popular 120-chapter Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) novel based on peasant uprisings in late Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127). Since the story is told in Chinese, flavored with Shandong dialect, Shepherd often offers an English summary first.
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