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The Tree That Bleeds

A Uighur Town on the Edge

In 1997 a small town in a remote part of China was shaken by violent protests that led to the imposition of martial law. Some said it was a peaceful demonstration that was brutally suppressed by the government; others that it was an act of terrorism. When Nick Holdstock arrived in 2001, the town was still bitterly divided. The main resentment was between the Uighurs (an ethnic minority in the region) and the Han (the ethnic majority in China). While living in Xinjiang, Holdstock was confronted with the political, economic and religious sources of conflict between these different communities, which would later result in the terrible violence of July 2009, when hundreds died in further riots in the region. The Tree that Bleeds is a book about what happens when people stop believing their government will listen. —Luath Press Limited

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Nick Holdstock
Luath Press Limited
June 2011
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Nick Holdstock spent three and a half years in China as a Voluntary Service Overseas teacher. He has written about China for London Review of Books and N+1. He was awarded a Scottish Arts Council Grant to return to China in March 2010 to evaluate how the riots in Xinjiang the previous summer and autumn had affected people's lives. He has contributed to a number of anthologies, including Stolen Stories; The Golden Hour Book; and Willesden Herald: New Short Stories 3.