E-books

Download: ePub   |  PDF
By Radio Free Asia

Wang Liming, also known as “Rebel Pepper,” is a renowned political cartoonist who works under the pen name of Rebel Pepper. His work focuses on political, cultural and societal developments across Asia.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download from Blurb

Download: ePub   |  PDF
By Radio Free Asia

Wang Liming, also known as “Rebel Pepper,” honed his craft as a political cartoonist by satirizing politics in his native China. In this collection of 50 drawings, Wang continues to apply his editorial and artistic wit to events in China, while also tackling issues from North Korean nuclear provocations to Cambodian political machinations to the Rohingya humanitarian crisis in Myanmar.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download: ePub   |  PDF
By Radio Free Asia

The Mekong has long been a river of empires, with distant rulers imposing their visions on local peoples whose fate is inextricably linked to its flow. The river is the lifeblood of more than 60 million people who depend on it for food, transportation and commerce. An RFA cameraman travels more than 2,700 miles down the Mekong, and records his interactions with the people whose lives depend on this mighty river.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download: ePub   |  PDF
By Han Dongfang , Radio Free Asia

“China’s Workers Wronged,” highlights the struggles and challenges faced by China’s workers during the country’s dramatic economic rise. The book is based on 88 interviews with Chinese workers conducted in recent years by China Labor Bulletin Executive Director Han Dongfang for RFA.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download: ePub   |  PDF
Dr. Dolkun Kamberi

In Ancient Heritage of Täklimakan and Uyghur Urbiculture, Dr. Dolkun Kamberi helps readers understand the Taklimakan was the main region through which the ancient Silk-Road had to pass. Discoveries many ancient heritages, cities sites, richness, and diversity of Uyghur literature provide a great deal of information regarding the early Uyghur civilization. The increasing role archaeology has played in aiding experts in constructing a chronology of Uyghur urbiculture using unearthed Uyghur manuscripts, medieval travelers’ accounts, and historical heritage of well-developed Uyghur literature.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download: ePub   |  PDF
Radio Free Asia

Beware of Traffickers is a graphic novel that follows two young women on their search for freedom. From abusive households, to lack of economic opportunity, Beware of Traffickers gives the reader a visual understanding of the plight of the victims. The drawings are the work of Burmese illustrator Ye Manh (a pseudonym,) also publisher of his own monthly comics dedicated to educating children in Buddhist values.

Download the e-book from Itunes
Download the e-book from Google Play
Download the mobile version from Google Play
Download the Burmese version from Radio Free Asia

Download: ePub   |  PDF
By Jin Seo Lee

North Korean prison camps incarcerate up to three generations of families of people who are accused of opposing the government. The inmates are completely cut off from North Korean society, which in turn knows little about the camps.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download: ePub   |  PDF
By Dolkun Kamberi

In Uyghurs and Uyghur Identity, Dr. Dolkun Kamberi helps readers understand Uyghur culture, language, literature, history, art, and religious identity, and shows that the Uyghurs have been an important part of Central Asia since ancient times despite present-day Chinese claims to the ownership of their land. Here, the author presents his views from several perspectives drawn from personal study, research, analysis, and the translation of medieval Uyghur manuscripts.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download: ePub   |  PDF
This e-book commemorates the one-year anniversary of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong, which took place over 79 days in late 2014. The student-led pro-democracy demonstration gained its name from the umbrellas used by protestors to shield themselves from tear gas fired at them by police. RFA’s reporting has been able to circumvent censored news coverage inside and out of China.

Download the e-book from iTunes,
Download the e-book from Google Play

Download: PDF
By Warren Smith

In October 2013, China published its eighth White Paper on Tibet. Here, RFA analyst Warren Smith weighs China’s claims of progress in Tibet against the truth of Tibetans’ lives under Beijing’s rule.

Download: ePub  |  PDF
'It's not OK' is a collection of portraits of Asian women caught in the struggle for human rights in their communities, some willingly, others forced by circumstances. Each is a testimony to the courage and determination of these women. The title, 'It's not OK,' comes from the public cry by one of them, in court, as she heard that her husband's sentence had been extended by eight years.

Download the ePub version from iTunes, Google Play
Download the iPad version from iTunes.
Visit the e-book's website.
Read the first edition of the e-book on Flipboard.

Download: ePub | iBook  | PDF
Nurmuhemmet Yasin was a popular author of short stories, essays and poetry when he was arrested in Kashgar in 2004. He had just published Wild Pigeon, a Uyghur tale of longing for lost freedom. This e-book features the now banned tale and an essay about love. Yasin was due to be released in November 2014, but RFA is unable to confirm whether he is free or even alive.

Download the ePub version from iTunes, Google Play
Download the iPad version from iTunes.
Download the e-book (epub) in Uyghur
Order a print version of the book here.

Download: iBook | ePub | PDF
Through pictures and video, we explore the evolution of a pro-democracy movement that began peacefully but ended in tragedy on the night of June 3-4, 1989. This book marks the 24th anniversary of the Chinese army crackdown on student demonstrators and the citizens who supported them.

Download the e-book in Chinese

Now available on iTunes, Google Play, NOOK Store


Download: PDF | Ebook
RFA's camera team follows the Mekong through Vietnam to its end in the South China Sea.

Day 60 – Entering Vietnam

Today we catch a bus from Siem Reap to Phnom Penh, where we arrange for the next stage of our journey downstream to Vietnam by boat. A ferry service runs twice each way every day, carrying tourists through a stretch of river with an amazing history. Read more

Download: PDF | Ebook
Our team goes into Cambodia to visit villages wrecked by floods and see the famous and endangered Mekong dolphins.

Days 51-52 – Entering Cambodia

For U.S. $5 a head we leave Don Sadam Island and the Four Thousand Islands behind, traveling first by boat, then by minibus on a bad road, and finally in a big bus on a sealed road, to make the three-hour trip to Stung Treng in northern Cambodia. Read more

Download: PDF | Ebook
RFA's cameraman and his crew enter Laos and visit villages along the river to assess the impact of dams and relocation schemes.

Day 43 – Entering Laos

Today we fly to Vientiane and find it a quaint and quiet little town next to the Mekong. Along the river in the center of town, earthworks and machinery are transforming the shoreline. Read more

Download: PDF | Ebook
The team hops on the bus to cross Laos and reach a spot on the river where a Burmese ethnic minority, the Lahu, took refuge from the Burmese army.

Day 27 – Leaving China

Carrying all of our footage, we leave Jinghong and head towards our first attempted Chinese border crossing.

The bus trip is a typically dyslexic affair, beginning with a short jaunt about 30 km out of town where the bus driver abruptly directs us to all disembark, followed by a two-hour wait during which we wonder if we will ever see our luggage again, brief happiness when the bus returns, and then a drive of a few hours to a very shiny and new Chinese border post. Read more

Download: PDF | Ebook
Our cameraman and his crew get tips on how to get "off the beaten tracks" and come close to the great glaciers melting into the Mekong.

Day 12 – Maduo to Deqin

It’s 9:20 a.m. and we are on a minibus about to leave for Deqin. We have been in a car for most of the last eight days, contending with the scale of China. The last 24 hours have been especially messed up.

Now we have a six-hour, 180-kilometer crawl around sheer mountain roads to get to Deqin. Tomorrow we sleep in! Read more

Download: PDF | Ebook
At the start of a journey down the Mekong River, Radio Free Asia's cameraman discovers Tibet, its ancient traditions and its stunning sites.

Day 1 – On our Way

We land in Xining, the capital of Qinghai province, and go to our hotel, which is flanked and fronted by karaoke bars. We have dinner in a Muslim café. Some of our fellow diners are pale-skinned Han people. Others are sunburnt dark brown with distinct red patches on each cheek and wear gangster hats and cheap sports jackets. They’re cowboys—the real thing. Read more

Download: PDF | Ebook
Drawings by Prum Vannak - Vannak is a Cambodian survivor of human trafficking. His story is one of extreme poverty and what people do to take care of their families. Most of them don't live to tell us their stories. Vannak is part of a lucky few. Read more

Download: PDF | Ebook
24 million people are enslaved in Asia. RFA traveled to faraway places to expose slavery. This journal reveals the private thoughts of the cameraman. He is an experienced professional. Yet what he saw during this assignment "changed him forever." Read more
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
View Full Site