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Linda Goldstein Knowlton’s documentary “Somewhere Between” feels deeply personal: It’s book-ended by footage of the director and her husband with their daughter Ruby, adopted from China ...
Movie review: “Somewhere Between” chronicles girls born in China, raised in U.S.
*** Somewhere Between Director Linda Goldstein Knowlton, who made this film as a gift to her adopted daughter, documents the lives of four teenagers who also came from China to live in the United ...
This Shanghai bookstore, now in D.C., was revived by its owner, who hopes to create a space for open discussions in the diaspora community, where people can sit and read together.
China in 1991 did not seem like the place or the time for a literary agency representing foreign book publishers and agents to open an office. The country was still recovering from the Tiananmen ...
By contrast, Cheung says a typical book from the U.S. is one called The Jar of Happiness. "A little girl attempts to make a potion of happiness in a jar," explains Cheung. Only to lose the jar.
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