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Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
I had never heard of Irene Corbally Kuhn before getting this book. I loved reading about all of her adventures, the peoole she met, the countries she traveled to. she was an amzing journalist and i will definitely do more reading into her.
 
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NickKnight | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 8, 2019 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
This is a companion piece to "You can't wrap fire in paper" by Kuhn's granddaughter Heather Corbally Bryant. Although the Bryant book is fiction, this is a memoir, previously published, by Kuhn and her early life, ending in 1937. It covers the beginning of her journalistic career and the time in China including her early marriage to Burt Kuhn.
It took me quite a while to read this book, not because I struggled, but because I wanted to savor it. Her writing style, the language and turn of phrase, her incredible memory for details made this a book to enjoy slowly. Luxuriate in the words.
But understand this is not a tell-all book in the celebrity style. Although she discusses her marriage to Burt and the birth of her child, these are nearly incidental to her life and career. It only sets up the circumstances of her returning to the US from China. But I don't fault her because I believe her purpose in writing this book is to discuss her career which was extremely interesting and a product of her own initiative. Pass on the fictionalized version and stick to these facts. It makes me want to read her newspaper articles.
 
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book58lover | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 11, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Dr. Corbally Bryant: Sorry I couldn't get this done sooner - I'm pretty much an old slacker. On the other hand, I'm sorry I didn't finish this wonderful book sooner. Your grandmother, Irene Corbally Kuhn, led a marvelously entertaining life, and reported on it in a remarkably interesting way. I'm a Boomer, so my parents grew up in the tail end of your grandmother's adventure. I thought this was great. Please print the second part, "You Can't Wrap Fire in Paper'.
 
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btuckertx | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 8, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
If Irene Corbally Khun has been the character of a novel, around 1922, which manuscript would have been found much later at the bottom of a famous Parisian's hotel basement, split in two old steamer trunks, long forgotten, then she would belong to Hemingway's "A Moveable Feast". This is because the memoirs of this female reporter narrating her journey to the Far-East start in Paris, France where she describes the life of an American expat in search of herself. She overcomes material difficulties to enter the profession of journalist.

If Irene Corbally Khun had been the main character of a comic book then as a fictional character, she could have been drawn by Herge, as he drew Tintin, also a reporter, travelling to the Far-East by boat through Port-Said in Egypt and the Canal of Suez on his way to the international concession in Shanghai, as narrated in "The Cigars of the Pharaoh" and the "Blue Lotus".

The difference is that Tintin remains a fiction while Irene really existed.

A Gertrude Bell of the East, her description of the still mysterious China is compelling. But unlike Tintin, Mrs. Khun makes the reader enter vividly the Shanghai of the times of playwright John Colton, as filmed by Director Josef Von Sternberg.
She does not hesitate to cross the lines between the organized international settlement to confront herself and report about the real China and its challenges. Along the way, she meets her husband, also a reporter, and many celebrities pepper this book, from Charles Chaplin, Harry Pilser, Douglas Fairbanks, Russian exiles from the Revolution, Admirals, Atamans,Aviators, Colonels, Generals, Warlords and, most strikingly, ordinary Chinese people from the No.1 of her expat household to the street beggar. With the axiom that "the longer you stay in China, the less you understand it" her depiction and vignettes are always interesting.

Excellent period memoirs with many first time events narrated with humor and a lots of insights on how the USA and Japan, members of the Entente at the end of World War I, maintained cordial relations to contain the spread of Communism. Ominously, the author notices the rising Chinese nationalism against Japan and the first revolutionary incidents. At the same time the somber masses of the American dreadnoughts anchored at large portend a rising a world conflict at one of its flashpoints.
 
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Artymedon | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 31, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Before receiving "Assigned to Adventure" as an early reviewer copy, I'd never heard of Irene Corbally Kuhn. However, reading this book (which is essentially a journal of her travels as a reporter in the 20's-30's), she's someone I respect and have a newfound interest in. The style of this book/journal is reminiscent of the time in which it was written; it flows very fast and is action-packed. It's like reading something that would have been on serialized on television with new adventures every week.

Her travels through various countries and experiences with the people and cultures there are handled with a level of whimsy that is both incredibly entertaining and also why I removed one star. While it is written in the style of the time, I'd like a more personal take on her life; I'd like a take where it was like we were good friends talking and I wasn't someone she was selling an article to.

Still, this is a very fun read and she sounds like an incredible woman. For anyone with an interest in journalism, travel, or even the old-way either of those professions ran, this is definitely a book to read.
 
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derek.stuhan | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 26, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Irene Kuhn was an American writer who worked as a journalist in Paris, Shanghai, and Hawaii; a Hollywood script writer; an executive and broadcaster for NBC; a New York columnist; and a contributor to Gourmet magazine until her retirement in the 1980s. Her memoirs, Assigned to Adventure, were published in 1938 and cover the earlier years of her career, before she settled in New York for good and started at NBC.

Kuhn wrote her memoirs in the style of the times, with a breezy tone of madcap fun and high jinx. No matter how serious the subject – poverty in China or the battle to legalize birth control, for example – she never turned maudlin. Matter-of-fact and no-nonsense were her lowest registers. The insouciant style of Kuhn’s writing is worth mentioning because she wrote the book to entertain, despite the fact that when she wrote it in 1938, she was newly-divorced from her second husband, her first husband had died under mysterious circumstances in Shanghai, she was raising her daughter by herself in New York, and the world rumbling towards war.

This new edition includes a forward by Kuhn's granddaughter, Dr. Heather Corbally Bryant, who has written a companion novel based on her grandmother called You Can't Wrap Fire in Paper.
 
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RoseCityReader | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 20, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Irene Corbally Kuhn was a pioneering woman journalist during the 1920's and 30's, who travelled the world, scooped her male (and female) counterparts, and found love while reporting in China. Her warm, interesting, and wholly engrossing memoir covered her entrance into her chosen field, her international reporting, and her marriage to fellow reporter Bert Kuhn, the birth of their daughter, and the decade following his death. She also worked in radio in China during the 20's and also later decamped to Hollywood to become a screenwriter.

Ms. Kuhn told her story in such a way as to make me wish I'd met her during her life - the tone of the book is one of being told a rollicking story. My only quibble is that the book ends in 1938 - she had a long career and life yet to go that is only touched on at the very end with some pictures.
 
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anneb10 | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 13, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
An action-packed adventure story set in the years between WWI & WWII; the story of a lady journalist, her travels, her work for various newspapers, and a few glimpses into her personal life. A delightful read, her writing style is a joy to behold. The glossary was a great touch! Highly recommend this book!! Made me wish she had written more books.
 
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Cheryl-L-B | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 3, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Irene Corbally Kuhn's 1938 memoir, Assigned to Adventure, is an intriguing and colorful account of her globetrotting exploits as a reporter during the 1920s-1930s heyday of print journalism. There is a distinct immediacy in her writing style which immerses the reader in the various locales and events; in particular, the descriptions of Paris and Shanghai are wonderfully evocative of the era, as are her fond remebrances of the energy, excitement, and cacaphony that characterized the city rooms of the New York newspapers. This was indeed a life well-lived, and the story is told with great wit and flair.
 
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ghr4 | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 30, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Intrepid woman reporter travels the world seeking adventure and finds love and heartbreak along the way. Sounds like a cliche' but in the hands of Irene Corbally Kuhn it is not. This is Ms. Kuhn's own life and she tells it in a most engaging manner. I would love to have met Ms. Kuhn over cocktails and heard more of her life's anecdotes and of the fascinating people she has met. Definitely recommend this book.½
 
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RiversideReader | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 18, 2018 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Assigned to Adventure is the book to read if you like reading about females doing a typical mans job and far excelling her male counterparts. The book is often engaging and hard to put down.
 
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CryBel | 10 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 14, 2018 |
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