On a Chinese Screen - W. Somerset Maugham

(7 User reviews)   1839
By Alex Wang Posted on Jan 20, 2026
In Category - Optimistic Futures
W. Somerset Maugham W. Somerset Maugham
English
Hey, you know how everyone talks about 'the real China'? Well, Somerset Maugham actually went there in the 1920s, and this book is his raw, unfiltered postcard. Forget grand historical epics. 'On a Chinese Screen' is a collection of quick, sharp sketches—vignettes of the people he met. It's not one story, but dozens. You'll meet a tired missionary losing his faith, a pompous British consul clinging to his status, and Chinese servants observing their foreign masters with quiet wisdom. The main 'conflict' is just the quiet, often awkward, collision of two worlds. There's no villain, just the slow, sometimes funny, sometimes heartbreaking friction of cultures trying to understand each other. It feels less like reading a book and more like flipping through a stranger's fascinating, slightly weathered travel journal. If you're curious about that moment when the West crashed into the East, seen through the eyes of a brilliant storyteller who doesn't sugarcoat anything, pick this up.
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So, what's this book actually about? In the early 1920s, W. Somerset Maugham traveled up the Yangtze River and into the heart of China. 'On a Chinese Screen' is the literary snapshot album from that trip. Don't expect a continuous plot. Instead, it's a series of fifty-eight short character studies and scenes, some just a page long. We drift from a crowded harbor to a remote mission station, from a diplomat's stuffy drawing room to a smoky opium den.

The Story

There isn't a single narrative thread. Think of it as a train journey where you get to peer into the lives of your fellow passengers for a few minutes at a time. You'll meet Mr. Pete, the American missionary whose zeal has curdled into bitterness. You'll observe the absurd formality of colonial officials maintaining British 'standards' in the middle of nowhere. You'll glimpse the silent endurance of Chinese laborers and the cunning of merchants. The 'story' is in the accumulation of these moments, painting a picture of a country in flux, where ancient traditions bump up against modern ambitions and foreign influence.

Why You Should Read It

I love this book because Maugham is a master observer, not a judge. He shows you the loneliness, the hypocrisy, the kindness, and the strangeness on both sides. His prose is clean and direct—no fluffy descriptions. He captures a person's entire life in a few telling details: the way they pour tea, the pride in a faded uniform, the look in their eyes. It's incredibly human. You won't get a history lesson, but you'll feel what it was like to be there. Some sketches are laugh-out-loud funny in their irony; others are quietly devastating. It’s this mix that makes it so compelling.

Final Verdict

This is perfect for readers who love character-driven writing and armchair travel. If you enjoyed the sharp sketches in Orwell's 'Down and Out in Paris and London' or the keen cultural observation in anything by Jan Morris, you'll feel right at home. It's also a great 'dipper' book—you can read it in short bursts. Just be warned: Maugham's gaze is unflinching. He doesn't romanticize the 'mysterious East' or glorify the Western adventurer. He just shows you people, in all their complicated, fascinating reality. A true classic of travel writing that hasn't lost its bite.



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Mary Taylor
1 year ago

I was skeptical at first, but the atmosphere created is totally immersive. Highly recommended.

Ashley Sanchez
1 year ago

This book was worth my time since it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. Absolutely essential reading.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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