Interview: Howard W. French

For the last 4 years, Howard W. French has served as the journalistic bridge between Shanghai and the rest of the world. Following posts in Africa, the Caribbean, Central America and Tokyo, French became the Shanghai Bureau Chief of The New York Times in 2003 and has covered China's drastic economic, political and social changes of the 21st century, what many have called "The Chinese Century." As well as regular reporting for the Times and International Herald Tribune, French wrote the acclaimed non-fiction work, A Continent for the Taking, in 2004 and is an accomplished photographer. His recent New York Times photo essay, "An Outsider's Camera Provides a Ticket Into a Secret World," examines the hidden pockets of old Shanghai tucked between "flashy new neighborhoods composed of jostling skyscrapers or roped off by looping expressways." Howard W. French talked to Small Swords about photographing Shanghai, the future of English-language journalism in China and sharing a middle initial with America's president.

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  SMALL SWORDS  
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The seventh and final installment of the Harry Potter book series is set to be released a minute after midnight Saturday in England and China has already spoiled the ending. According to a Reuters report Thursday, numerous Chinese Web sites published what are allegedly the final pages and photos from the new book, titled Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. As the book has not yet been released, no one can confirm whether the material is authentic. Reportedly, the images and text were found on a Chinese peer-to-peer downloading site and were published on sites as big as sina.com, China's largest news site. Potter author J.K. Rowling revealed last year that two of the three main characters would die in the final book, creating a whirlwind of anticipation leading up to Saturday's release.  While pirated versions of the book are sure to be available in China soon after the Saturday release, the official Chinese translation of Potter will not be released until October 21. In 2002, a fake Harry Potter volume not written by Rowling called Harry Potter and Leopard Walk Up To Dragon emerged in the mainland. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is expected to be the highest and fastest-selling book release of all time.     

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