cover image The Great Wall: The Extraordinary Story of China’s Wonder of the World

The Great Wall: The Extraordinary Story of China’s Wonder of the World

John Man, . . Da Capo, $26 (335pp) ISBN 978-0-306-81767-0

According to Man, in his second book this year after Terra Cotta Army, China’s Great Wall is really a series of walls, part stone, part rammed earth, that were built in different eras and do not form a continuous line. Traveling the wall end to end from Mongolia to Lanzhou, the capital of China’s Gansu province, Man learns that the first Great Wall sprang from the towering ambition and brutal policies of the first emperor, Zheng, who around 214 B.C. repaired and joined up a collection of little walls totaling 2,500 kilometers in length. In 1138, China’s Jin rulers built 4,000 kilometers of wall, but the Mongols, led by Genghis Khan, burst through the wall in the 13th century and stayed for 150 years. To ensure that they never returned, the 15th-century Ming Dynasty built its wall. Mao co-opted the wall, which no longer served any defense purpose, as a symbolic monument to the achievement of ordinary, suffering people. This engrossing and well-researched history of China’s most famous architectural project whets the reader’s appetite to tread in Man’s footsteps. Photos, maps. (Sept.)