Reviews
Among the many quirks that make Mr. Griffin's account so interesting is the culture clash that ensued. . . a broad diplomatic tableau with fascinating personal histories., "A gripping read of the unlikely intertwining of table tennis as a sport with British and Soviet spycraft, and the high politics that broke China and the United States out of their Cold War confrontation. Anyone interested in the history of Sino-American normalization will find this literate and well documented history of "ping-pong diplomacy" filled with poignant examples of how the politics of Mao's Cultural Revolution used and destroyed the lives of Chinese officials enamored with the play of the little white ball.", eoeAt last, here is the fascinating story of the sport that shaped the geopolitics today. Part character-driven history, part diplomatic caper, and part investigative pilgrimage to contemporary China, Ping Pong Diplomacy makes us look again at an event that Griffin reveals is the climax of a decades-long movement. This is narrative history at its best.e, eoe Ping-Pong Diplomacy belongs in the category of e~you cane(tm)t make this stuff up.e(tm) It reads more like a le Carré novel than diplomatic history. But the tale it recounts actually happened, and casts a new and provocative light on the U.S. Opening to China, one of the great foreign policy breakthroughs of the 20th century.e, Fascinating ... tales of grit and tenacity, manipulation and deception. In his deeply-researched and fast-paced narrative, reading in parts almost like fiction, Griffin brings to life the redoubtable Ivor Montagu and others who transformed the innocuous game with the little bouncy white ball into a potent instrument of international politics., At last, here is the fascinating story of the sport that shaped the geopolitics today. Part character-driven history, part diplomatic caper, and part investigative pilgrimage to contemporary China, Ping Pong Diplomacy makes us look again at an event that Griffin reveals is the climax of a decades-long movement. This is narrative history at its best., eoeA gripping read of the unlikely intertwining of table tennis as a sport with British and Soviet spycraft, and the high politics that broke China and the United States out of their Cold War confrontation. Anyone interested in the history of Sino-American normalization will find this literate and well documented history of eoeping-pong diplomacye filled with poignant examples of how the politics of Maoe(tm)s Cultural Revolution used and destroyed the lives of Chinese officials enamored with the play of the little white ball.e, This is the amazing drama of how Ping Pong changed the world. With great research and narrative skills, Griffin brings us behind the scenes of the historic trip by the American team to China in 1971 to tell what really happened and why. Plus he puts it into the context of Ping Pong's fascinating history of being more than just a game., "Meticulously researched and ambitiously conceived... a scrupulous meditation on how eccentricities of time and place can shape big political and social events"., A fascinating account ... revealing and well-researched ... It is to Griffin's credit that in this book he has finally nailed ... the crucial event that initiated Ping-Pong diplomacy., A quirky, thoroughly enjoyable trek through the implausible beginnings of international table tennis and the colorful characters-cum-diplomats behind it. Griffin has the dexterity and cleverness to take on the story...[and] maintain lively interest in the array of personalities involved., eoeFull of eyebrow-raising surprisesethe book tells the secret history of Ping-Pong, a story of violence and intrigue and political machinations. Ping-Pong as a vehicle for international espionage? Ite(tm)s an idea so outlandish that, if it werene(tm)t true, some novelist would have to invent it. A remarkable story, well documented and excitingly told.e, Ping-Pong Diplomacy is a deeply absorbing, suspenseful, and hilarious behind-the-scenes peek into a riveting slice of sports and political history. Nicholas Griffin has delivered an overhead smash. I love this book!, Off-beat and engrossing.... Griffin tells human stories as deftly as he describes the machinations of international communism...a fitting treatment of the entire overlooked episode., Griffin has found an intriguing story with which to illuminate several important political events of the later 20th century and told it well., Ping-Pong Diplomacy belongs in the category of 'you can't make this stuff up.' It reads more like a le Carré novel than diplomatic history. But the tale it recounts actually happened, and casts a new and provocative light on the U.S. Opening to China, one of the great foreign policy breakthroughs of the 20th century., eoeAlfred Hitchcock would grab this book for a spy thriller. He himself makes an entry into the melodrama superbly plotted by Nick Griffin. The MacGuffin in this case are table tennis balls by the hundred, which mislead British intelligence in its surveillance of an apparently rather daffy British aristocrat. I happen to have known the aristo, Ivor Montagu, when I played in table tennis tournaments he organized in Europe. He fooled me, too. But then until Ping Pong Diplomacy came along, whoe(tm)d guessed what he was up to as he moved among the marquee namese"Trotsky and Charlie Chaplin, President Roosevelt and Sam Goldwyn, Mao and the Queen of England'e, An informative and entertaining book ... Griffin shows that the Chinese were controlling the game all along. In both ping-pong and diplomacy, the Americans were woefully outmatched., Reads so much like a thriller that you have to keep reminding yourself that it is all fact ... a book of meticulous archival research and reportage., A jolly romp through the 20th century . . . a series of events that might bedeemed too outlandish for the sensible reader, were they not entirely true., "A stranger-than-fiction tale....Through meticulous research and an impressively-crafted narrative, Griffin gives depth to the life of the "the forgotten architect" of so-called ping-pong diplomacy.", Alfred Hitchcock would grab this book for a spy thriller. He himself makes an entry into the melodrama superbly plotted by Nick Griffin. The MacGuffin in this case are table tennis balls by the hundred, which mislead British intelligence in its surveillance of an apparently rather daffy British aristocrat. I happen to have known the aristo, Ivor Montagu, when I played in table tennis tournaments he organized in Europe. He fooled me, too. But then until Ping Pong Diplomacy came along, who'd guessed what he was up to as he moved among the marquee names--Trotsky and Charlie Chaplin, President Roosevelt and Sam Goldwyn, Mao and the Queen of England?, Alfred Hitchcock would grab this book for a spy thriller. He himself makes an entry into the melodrama superbly plotted by Nick Griffin. The MacGuffin in this case are table tennis balls by the hundred, which mislead British intelligence in its surveillance of an apparently rather daffy British aristocrat. I happen to have known the aristo, Ivor Montagu, when I played in table tennis tournaments he organized in Europe. He fooled me, too. But then until Ping Pong Diplomacy came along, who'd guessed what he was up to as he moved among the marquee names-Trotsky and Charlie Chaplin, President Roosevelt and Sam Goldwyn, Mao and the Queen of England?, Full of eyebrow-raising surprises...the book tells the secret history of Ping-Pong, a story of violence and intrigue and political machinations. Ping-Pong as a vehicle for international espionage? It's an idea so outlandish that, if it weren't true, some novelist would have to invent it. A remarkable story, well documented and excitingly told., Ping-Pong Diplomacy belongs in the category of 'you can't make this stuff up.' It reads more like a le Carr novel than diplomatic history. But the tale it recounts actually happened, and casts a new and provocative light on the U.S. Opening to China, one of the great foreign policy breakthroughs of the 20th century.