Bertram had a number of works published. (this section needs further research)
Asia • Crisis in China, MacMillan & Co, 1937. Also published under the title of 'First Act in China - The Story of the Sian Mutiny'. New York, The Viking press, 1938. • North China Front, MacMillan & Co, London 1939. Published as "Unconquered. Journal of a year's adventures among the fighting peasants of north China" in New York by The John Day Company, 1939. Includes interviews with Chairman Mao and Zhou Enlai. • Beneath the Shadow; a New Zealander in the Far East, 1939–46. New York, J. Day Co. 1947. Published as "The Shadow of a War" in London and New Zealand. • Return to China. London, William Heinemann Ltd, 1957. • The young Traveller in China today. London, Phoenix House, 1961 • Capes of China slide away : a memoir of peace and war, 1910-1980 Auckland : Auckland University Press; [New York] : Distributed outside New Zealand by Oxford University Press, 1993. Bertram's works have been published in China in both English and Chinese. Bertram's Chinese name is 贝特兰 (pinyin Bèi Tèlán). •
First Act in China:The Story of the Sian Mutiny, James Bertram. Foreign Languages Press, 2003. 中国第一幕:西安事变(新西兰)贝特兰 (外文出版社 2003) •
North China Front. (English edition), James Bertram. Foreign Languages Publishing Press, 2004. 华北前线(英文版) 贝特兰(James Bertram) (作者) (外文出版社 2004) •
Return to China. (English edition), James Bertram. Foreign Languages Publishing Press, 2004. 重返中国(英文版) 贝特兰(James Bertram) (作者) (外文出版社 2004) •
First Act in China:The Story of the Sian Mutiny, James Bertram. Shaanxi People's Publishing Press, December 2007. Translator Niu Yulan 中国的第一幕—西安事变秘闻—贝特兰 (作者), 牛玉林 (译者)出 版:陕西人民出版社 2007.12
New Zealand and other works • New Zealand Rhodes scholars, year and publisher not known. • The adventures of Chanticleer and Partlet. Translated from the German. Authors: Jacob Grimm; Wilhelm Grimm; James M Bertram; Christchurch, Caxton Press, 1941. • New Zealand letters of Thomas Arnold the younger with further letters from Van Diemen's Land and letters of Arthur Hugh Clough, 1847–1851. Authors: Thomas Arnold; Arthur Hugh Clough; James M Bertram. University of Auckland; London, Wellington, Oxford University Press, 1966. • Occasional verses, Wellington: Wai-te-ata Press, 1971. • Towards a New Zealand literature, Dunedin, Hocken Library, 1971. • Charles Brasch, last Landfall. Wellington: New York : Oxford University Press, 1976. • New Zealand Love Poems. Dunedin: J. McIndoe, 1977. • Dan Davin, Auckland: New York : Oxford University Press, 1983. • Flight of the Phoenix: Critical Notes on New Zealand authors. Victoria : Victoria University Press, 1985. • New Zealand poets in retrospect : eight New Zealand poets, no longer living, are placed in social and poetic context, Katherine Mansfield, Robin Hyde, Charles Brasch, R.A.K. Mason, A.R.D. Fairburn, James K. Baxter, Denis Glover, M.K. Joseph. James M Bertram; Replay Radio (N.Z.) Wellington, Radio New Zealand, Replay Radio,1986.
Autobiography Bertram's 1992 autobiography
Capes of China Slide Away: A memoir of peace and war 1910-1980. drew on material covered in Bertram's earlier books,
Crisis in China,
North China Front and
The Shadow of a War. In the foreword to
Capes of China Slide Away Bertram wrote 'I am more Marco Polo than Rousseau. If there is any lasting interest in the chapters that follow, it is probably in the nature of the material. I was a not atypical middle-class New Zealander of my own war generation but some of my experience was perhaps out of the common run. China and Japan are nearer to us now than they seemed fifty years ago; we all need to know more about them. So I hope in my recollections of some critical years of war and revolution may throw light, for readers, on recent history in the Pacific zone.'
New Zealand's China Experience Two of Bertram's articles were included in ''New Zealand's China Experience'', published with the assistance of the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade to mark the fortieth anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between New Zealand and the People's Republic of China. The first piece was "The Twelfth of December" in which Bertram wrote about an anti-Japanese student demonstration in Beijing in 1936 on the day that the Xi'an Incident took place. The second article was "The Way to Yenan" describing Bertram's invitation by Mao Zedong 'to become the first official British visitor to
Yan'an' (Yenan) and Bertram's attendance at Mao's lecture on the political work of the Eighth Route Army.
Works on James Bertram James McNeish wrote about Bertram in his book
Dance of the Peacocks, New Zealanders in exile in the time of Hitler and Mao Tse-tung. Based on the story of five diverse yet closely connected New Zealanders, Dance of the Peacocks is the story of a group of Rhodes scholars who went to Oxford, but couldn't come home again: James Munro Bertram,
Dan Davin,
Geoffrey Cox, Ian Milner, and
John Mulgan. ==James Bertram Scholarship==