by Zhao Changtian (translated by Yang Shuhui and Yang Yunqin)
Better Link Press
4 stars
In 19th-century China, there was no foreigner like Robert Hart. An Irishman, he served the Qing empire with devotion for 45 years, 40 of them as inspector-general of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs. Three days after his death in September 1911, the emperor conferred on him the title of "Senior Guardian of the Heir Apparent", the highest honour that he could give to a foreigner.
Hart had access to the most senior people in China, including the Empress Dowager and Prince Gong, the emperor's brother.
Such a person is indeed worthy of a biography.
Zhao Changtian was an award-winning Chinese novelist who died in March 2013, aged 66. Of the two translators, Yang Shuhui is a professor of Chinese in Maine, while Yang Yunqin is a simultaneous interpreter at the United Nations.
Zhao's book is excellent in describing Hart's complicated private life and his unique role as a mediator between China and the western powers at key moments in the 19th century. A British subject working for the Chinese emperor, he had the trust of both sides and the language and personal skills needed for such a difficult assignment.