Combining an exceptional love story with a gripping tale of incarceration in Stalin's gulag and later in Mao's concentration camps, Patrick Lescot's 'Before Mao' is a deeply moving, beautifully told saga of Li Lisan, Mao's predecessor at the head of the communist party, a key member of the Russian and Chinese revolutions.
Told in an engaging, highly dramatic style that reads more like a novel than a standard history, Lescot skillfully unfolds this page-turning biography. Li, who led the Chinese communist party in the 1920s, was a rare survivor among the Chinese members of the lnternationale. He was eventually allowed to return to China after having been elected, in absentia, to Mao Zedong's government.
When Mao and Khrushchev fell out of power after 1959, the Chinese communist party demanded that Li divorce his wife, Lisa. When the couple refused to do so, Lisa was only allowed to stay by becoming a Chinese citizen. Soon after, both would be victims of the Cultural Revolution. Lisa was taken from her husband shortly before he was again arrested, imprisoned, and tortured - this time fatally. She spent eight years in solitary confinement.
Moving from China to France to the Soviet Union and finally back to China, 'Before Mao' is an extraordinary chronicle of the indomitable human spirit "allowing us to share in some true moments of emotion, where love wins over totalitarianism's destruction of individuality" (Le Monde).