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MWSA Book Review

China With Love - Letters from An American GI in World War II China and India

Author:  Lou Glist

Publisher:  Emerald Ink

Reviewer: Bill McDonald – President of the MWSA

Love Letters to Wartime Bride from 60 Years Ago!

There are no other books like this out there any where.  This book in its revised edition comes with a new title, “China With Love.”  Author, artist and WWII veteran, Lou Glist writes from his heart and makes this book a pleasure to read as well as to view.  The author adds his personal artistic drawings to most of his letters that he sent home during WWII.  These capture events and people like words alone would only fail to do.

This book is charming, historic, funny, sad, inspiring, loving, tender, compassionate, even educational and always entertaining.  Lou takes you through his adventures (there is no better word for his tour of duty in Asia) in a series of love letters written to his bride whom he had to leave behind when he went off to war.  What a lucky woman she is to be treated with such colorful observations of people and places.  The greatest thing however is that these letters all managed to survive and are now being shared through this wonderful book.

The emotions and thoughtful observations of the author are gently expressed and shared with the reader through a collection of letters sent by him to his wife, from India and China, during WWII.  Glist was a part of the US Army serving the Chinese Combat Command as an ordinance officer attached to the Chinese Army.  His letters are filled with historic antidotes and on the spot personal comments of that time and place.  Nothing you will ever read will give you such an insider view of this part of the world at this important period in world history, as this book does.  It is a rare treat for readers to discover and well worth sitting down and investing your leisure time in reading and looking at this book.  With all the drawings, you will be looking at these pages as much as you are reading them.

This book is uplifting and good pure entertainment with some educational value thrown into the mix.  This book gets the MWSA Top Rating! A must read book!

2005 Distinguished Honor Award!

China Mailbag Uncensored:

Wartime Memory of China

Farmers shouldering a pole. Women washing with a stick. An old man selling his sugar figurines. The ancient temples. Small villages. These typical scenes in the Chinese way of life became subjects of the love letters six decades ago.

They were letters an American soldier wrote to his newly-wed wife. With his vivid description and illustrative sketches, China Mailbag Uncensored walks the readers through World War II in China during the Japanese invasion period.

During the latter days of the War of Resistance Against Japanese aggression (1937-45), General Joseph Stillwell ordered American officers to oversee ordnance distribution (armaments). Lou Glist, the author, was one of them.

He left home for China before Christmas Day in 1944, becoming an armourer. In the following 17 months, not only did he write a lot to his wife, Lottie, but also drew more than 100 sketches and cartoons, giving vivid pictures of how Chinese people had endured the arduous war and of how his life was.

By reading this book, the reader can feel the foreign experience of a young American on a desperate and dangerous mission to help the Chinese defeat the Japanese in the war.

"My objective was to sustain her optimism and reduce any gnawing fear of personal loss, especially in a world with such a vastly different culture," Glist wrote in his introduction. "I tried to capture my cultural shock and learning experiences in words and drawings to reflect the pathos and humor of the circumstances."

Lottie wrote in the preface of the book's Chinese version: "He wrote to me with an artist's eye so that I could see the textured landscape, could smell the air and could see the gallant Chinese people striving to save their country. I saw his love of China in every word and sketch he sent and, through his eyes, grew to love his China, too."

Zhao Qizheng, former minister of the Information Office of the State Council, who recommended that the book be published in Chinese, said at an author event for the Chinese version last week in Beijing: "I felt as if I were watching history unfold while reading his book. I could see the friendship and co-operation between the Chinese people and the US soldiers, their courage, and I could feel the sense of humor, although the war was brutal."

The book was published by New World Press of Beijing.

Back in the United States, after his China Mailbag Uncensored was published in the United States last year, it aroused great interest among readers.

"When I finished reading China Mailbag Uncensored, I felt compelled to share with you my deepest appreciation for what you had written," commented Mary Noland from Houston. "I valued the cultural sensitivity you evidenced, your engaging illustrations and deeply personal responses to your experiences. ... Your sensitivity in describing what is often not obvious to others, those things that flavor and season experience. Your 'inner eye' and emotional sensitivity came through."

"Thank goodness that your wonderful new book, China Mailbag Uncensored, was published to record the truth!" commented R.T. Barnhart from Columbia University.

Dr Jack Gren from Fort Wayne, Indiana, said: "As the pages were turned, many memories of people, places, things and happenings were recalled. It will be positioned in a place of prominence in the educational exhibit."

Glist rejoined his wife in 1946. In 1984, he and Lottie toured China, "with the idea of seeing many of the places I had told her about in 1945-46," he said.

In 1997, they brought their granddaughter to China, touring several major cities.

On Saturday, Glist, now 82, together with other veterans both from China and abroad who had taken part in the war, were invited to the ceremony commemorating the victory at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. It was also the Glists' 61st wedding anniversary, which they also celebrated.

His book in Chinese serves as a good reminder of the Chinese efforts in resisting the Japanese.

"You will meet the Chinese, Americans and Europeans who played roles in this drama," he wrote in the introduction.

"It is the intent that the reader be entertained as well as learn from this portraiture of a most unusual world. China, India and Myanmar were the Allies' backdoor battlefield, which was filled with astounding feats of courage, both by combatants and civilians directly affected."

(China Daily September 6, 2005)

Obituary

LOUIS GLIST, 83, artist, author and volunteer, passed away peacefully at home Thursday, November 10, 2005.

Glist is locally known as an artist, as the author of China Mailbag Uncensored, Letters from an American GI in WWII China and India, and as a graphics and training consultant.

Lou Glist was born in Los Angeles, California, on April 7, 1922. He enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1942, and served in the China Burma India theater of war. For his service in China, four-year WWII veteran Glist was awarded the Bronze Star Medal and decorated by the Chinese government with the Breast Order of the Yun Hui.

Glist graduated from the University of Southern California with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering, attended Chouinard Art Institute and received a Certificate in Industrial Relations from UCLA.

After 30 years of working for Shell Oil Company in the US, England, Europe, the Far East and South Africa in management, merchandising and training assignments, Glist retired to focus on his art. Glist had been recognized as one of the nation's top college cartoonists, wrote and illustrated for the Stars and Stripes, and illustrated throughout his business career.  In 1982, he opened his own art studio. His water- colors have been exhibited at various venues around the region, are featured in Baylor College Calendar on Aging, and won a Bronze Award from the World Art for Peace Com- petition. His cartoons won a Silver Award from the International TV and Arts Festival. During the last 23 years, he has had his paintings, cartoons and caricatures appear in regional, international and major company publications and calendars. In addition to media design, he has written copy for major company training media and manuals, and authored manuals on training, salesmanship and conceptualizing.

An Irrepressible Volunteer, Glist served as President of the Watercolor Art Society of Houston, and chaired its Outreach program that provides art instruction for school children, cancer patients at Texas Children's Hospital, and the mature segment of our population. He created a major mural dedicated to these children in the former Texas Children's Cancer Center Chemotherapy and Oncology department. He taught art to children cancer patients through the Periwinkle Foundation. In 2000, Glist published China Mailbag Uncensored, a book of letters, cartoons and sketches sent from WWII China to his wife, Lottie, then a bride of only four months. His work provides a unique view of rural wartime China and cosmopolitan Shanghai after Japan's defeat. The book was released in translation in China in September 2005, during extensive ceremonies throughout China in which Glist represented the United States China-Burma-India Association and the US-China Peoples Friendship Association. Glist was also active in the China-India-Burma Veteran's Association.-Houston Basha, Downtown Kiwanis, and was .a member of the Geriatric Art Society, National Speakers Association, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Asia Society and World Affairs Council. Throughout his life, Lou Glist gave generously and tirelessly of himself with grace, wit, love and respect. He is survived by his beloved wife of 61 years, Lottie Glist; daughter, Marcia Breaz and husband Peter Breaz, son Paul Glist and wife Karla Jamir, and grandchildren Heather Marie Fletcher and husband Matthew Fletcher, Jordan Glist, and Anna Glist. Funeral services will be held Monday, November 14, 2005 at 10:30 AM in the Chapel at Houston National Cemetery. Military honors will follow.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Periwinkle Foundation, 713-807-0191.

Levy Funeral Directors

(713) 660-6633