By weaving his classmates’ lives into an extraordinary chronicle of the past forty years of China’s reinvention, Pomfret reveals the new China as it has never been seen before. Tracing the stories of Book Idiot Zhou, the widow Little Guan, the sad sack Old Wu, the feckless dissident Daybreak Song, and Party apparatchik Big Bluffer Ye, Pomfret relates their small and large triumphs, and how the Chinese, as individuals and as a society, grapple with the skeletons of their past as they continue to push forward into futures marked by ever-increasing prosperity, opportunity, and unease. Maoism is dead in China, Pomfret reports, but no new beliefs have appeared to replace it.
In addition to his experience as an award-winning reporter in China, Pomfret has––since he first arrived in the country at the age of twenty-one––harbored a lifelong love and respect for the country and its people, making him the ideal writer to deliver the story of China from the ground up. His riveting portrait of the Chinese people will change how we think of China as well as challenge perceptions of the way fate can reshape the course of nations as surely as it has the extraordinary lives of these five classmates.
Raised in New York City and educated at Stanford and Nanjing universities, John Pomfret is an award-winning journalist with The Washington Post. He has been a foreign correspondent for 15 years, covering big wars and small in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Congo, Sri Lanka, Iraq, southwestern Turkey and northeastern Iran. Pomfret has spent seven years covering China – one in the late 1980s during the Tiananmen Square protests and then from 1998 until the end of 2003 as the bureau chief for The Washington Post in Beijing.
Pomfret speaks, reads and writes Mandarin, having spent two years at Nanjing University in the early 1980s as part of one of the first groups of American students to study in China. He has been a bartender in Paris and practiced Judo in Japan.
In 2003, Pomfret was awarded the Osborne Elliot Award for the best coverage of Asia by the Asia Society.
He is married to a Chinese entrepreneur and has two children. “Chinese Lessons: Five Classmates and the Story of the New China” is his first book.



