Wild Swans The international best-seller is a biography of three generations of Chinese women in 20th century China – her grandmother, mother, and herself. Chang paints a vivid portrait of the political and military turmoil of China in this period, from the marriage of her grandmother to a
warlord, to her mother's experience of Japanese-occupied
Jinzhou during the
Second Sino-Japanese War, and her own experience of the effects of Mao's policies of the 1950s and 1960s.
Wild Swans was translated into 37 languages and sold 13 million copies, receiving praise from authors such as
J. G. Ballard. It is banned in mainland China, though many
pirated versions circulated, as do translations in Hong Kong and
Taiwan.
Mao: The Unknown Story Chang's 2005 work, a biography of Mao, was co-authored with her husband
Jon Halliday and portrays Mao in an extremely negative light. The couple traveled all over the world to research the book, which took 12 years to write. They interviewed hundreds of people who had known Mao, including
George H. W. Bush,
Henry Kissinger, and
Tenzin Gyatso, the
Dalai Lama. Later, he described it in his book
On China as "one-sided but often thought-provoking." Among their criticisms of Mao, Chang and Halliday argue that despite his having been born into a relatively rich peasant family, he had little well-informed concern for the long-term welfare of the Chinese peasantry. They hold Mao responsible for
the famine resulting from the
Great Leap Forward and state that he had created the famine by exporting food when China had insufficient grain to feed its own people. They also write that Mao had arranged for the arrests and murders of many of his political opponents, including some of his personal friends, and they argue that he was a far more tyrannical leader than had previously been thought.
Mao: The Unknown Story became a best-seller, with UK sales alone reaching 60,000 in six months. Academics and commentators wrote reviews ranging from praise to criticism. Professor
Richard Baum said that it had to be "taken very seriously as the most thoroughly researched and richly documented piece of synthetic scholarship" on Mao.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported that while few commentators disputed it, "some of the world's most eminent scholars of modern Chinese history" had referred to the book as "a gross distortion of the records." Historian Rebecca Karl summarized its negative reception, writing, "According to many reviewers of [
Mao: The Unknown Story], the story told therein is unknown because Chang and Halliday substantially fabricated it or exaggerated it into existence."
Empress Dowager Cixi In October 2013, Chang published a biography of
Empress Dowager Cixi, who led China from 1861 until her death in 1908. Chang argues that Cixi has been "deemed either tyrannical and vicious, or hopelessly incompetent—or both," and that this view is both simplistic and inaccurate. Chang portrays her as intelligent, open-minded, and a proto feminist limited by a xenophobic and deeply conservative imperial bureaucracy. Although Cixi is often accused of reactionary conservatism (especially for her treatment of the
Guangxu Emperor during and after the
Hundred Days' Reform), Chang argues that Cixi actually started the Reforms and "brought medieval China into the modern age." Newspaper reviews have also been positive in their assessment.
Te-Ping Chen, writing in
The Wall Street Journal, found the book "packed with details that bring to life its central character."
Simon Sebag Montefiore writes: "Filled with new revelations, it's a gripping and surprising story of an extraordinary woman in power. Using Chinese sources, totally untapped by western books, this reappraises one of the great monstresses of modern history… Jung Chang’s revisionism means that this book reveals a new and different woman: ambitious, sometimes murderous, but pragmatic and unique. All of this adds up to make Empress Dowager Cixi a powerful read."
The New York Times named it one of its "
Notable Books of the Year". The book received critical treatment in the academic world. The Qing dynasty specialist
Pamela Kyle Crossley wrote a skeptical review in the
London Review of Books. "Chang has made impressive use of the rapidly expanding range of published material from the imperial archives. But understanding these sources requires profound study of the context. [...] Her claims regarding Cixi’s importance seem to be minted from her own musings and have little to do with what we know was actually going in China. I am as eager as anyone to see more attention paid to women of historical significance. But rewriting Cixi as
Catherine the Great or
Margaret Thatcher is a poor bargain: the gain of an illusory icon at the expense of historical sense."
List of works • Jung Chang and Jon Halliday,
Madame Sun Yat-sen: Soong Ching-ling (London, 1986); Penguin, • Jung Chang,
Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China (London, 1992); 2004 Harper Perennial ed. • Jung Chang,
Lynn Pan and Henry Zhao (edited by Jessie Lim and Li Yan),
Another province: new Chinese writing from London (London, 1994); Lambeth Chinese Community Association, . • Jung Chang and Jon Halliday,
Mao: The Unknown Story (London, 2005); Jonathan Cape, • Jung Chang,
Empress Dowager Cixi: The Concubine Who Launched Modern China (Alfred A. Knopf, 2013), • Jung Chang,
Big Sister, Little Sister, Red Sister (Jonathan Cape, 2019) • Jung Chang,
Fly, Wild Swans: My Mother, Myself and China (William Collins, 2025) ==References==