This is a book which people will admire and will possibly wish they had written. Lots of writers have tried to deliver up the life and the atmosphere of old Shanghai with historical facts, statistics, anecdotes and photos, but this is a different sort of social history of the city, all calmly understated.
As the title suggests it deals with life for Chinese often living outside the French Concession and International Settlement, and is not a dizzying catalogue of westerners in night clubs, taxi dancers, gambling dens, horse racing, dog racing, and the Great World. Instead it deals with the different forms of housing, the different kinds of neighbourhood, the different sizes of house, the life experiences of those living within them, and the trades they were likely to engage in.
It's not all household or family history: there is plenty of political history, of for example the several editions of the Land Regulations, 'the only document possibly providing a legal basis' for the foreign settlement, and of the Taiping Rebellion's effect in swelling the Chinese population of Shanghai. There are plenty of good-to-remember facts, such as that Shanghai's earliest workshops were western-run shipyards in the Hongkew area, but it is life away from the Bund and even from the Native City which mostly occupies this book.
Traditional and changing Chinese perceptions of city life, sense of community, or a lack of, within cramped city dwellings, the work and life expectancy of rickshaw pullers, shanty towns and slums, squatters, grades of poor housing (a straw hut was by no means the meanest form of dwelling), lilang (lane) houses, second landlords, and '72 tenants to a house' provide a view of the non-westernised side of Shanghai.
In addition to a study of the proliferation of the rickshaw-pulling trade, the book deals with the industries of night soil collecting, mobile kitchens, barbers, peddlers, small front room businesses, tobacco stores, sesame cake stores, proletarian restaurants, and the guilds which were formed to provide regulation, through licenses, cleanliness requirements, beggar tax, and local toughs, of all this small-scale and easily-established business activity.
With some fascinating examples of neighbourly sqabbles and lane gossip, well annotated with good information in the notes, and with numerous photographs and scarcely a mention of the Green Gang, this book is a pleasure.