Lisa See 's "Shanghai Girls" series includes "Shanghai Girls" and "Dream Dreams". Shanghai Girl Series books, boxes, or comprehensive versions and a list of matching titles are all displayed
Of course, some of the most popular Western novels about China such as Lisa See's "Shanghai Girls" series are past, and it is complicated but at least static. Amy Tan, author of "Happy Games" (1989) and "Bone Daughter" (2001), often writes about the 1949 Chinese revolutionary generation women and their descendants of American immigrants. Chinese novelists are facing further challenges in censorship of the people. Murong Xuecun, author of "Leave One Alone" (2002), once wrote a boring life for young people in Chinese cities such as Chengdu, but hit including social media bans. Shanghai-born novelist Chan Koonchung set the theme of The Fat Years (2009) in the future, but it has not been announced in China.
Shanghai is a city built by Western culture and Chinese government. When you open a history book on Shanghai, you can see that Shanghai was a foreign concession for some countries in Europe at the time. While they occupied Shanghai, they also developed the city. They can hire low-priced workers to earn more money, but they built many factories in Shanghai in the past. In addition, they brought some advanced skills and better education to the city. There are still European buildings and churches in the center of Shanghai. The Communist Party of China also did an effective job for the success of Shanghai. After the failure of the Chinese Cultural Revolution, the Chinese Communist government found that they had to open the country to the world. Shanghai is a window between China and the world, due to Shanghai's history and coastal areas. With the opening of China, Shanghai is developing more and more rapidly.