A grainy black-and-white family photo shows a father kneeling down next to two small children, who both appear to be under the age of 6. The slightly older child stands while the younger one sits on the father's lap.
A grainy black-and-white family photo shows a father kneeling down next to two small children, who both appear to be under the age of 6. The slightly older child stands while the younger one sits on the father's lap.
Xi Jinping (left) with his father, Xi Zhongxun, in 1958. Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Review

Xi Jinping’s Family Fortunes

A new biography explores the tangled politics of a revolutionary father.

Xi Jinping (left) with his father, Xi Zhongxun, in 1958. Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
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By , currently a senior nonresident associate at Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., and a visiting scholar at the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University.

The primary reason most people will pick up a biography of veteran Chinese revolutionary Xi Zhongxun is that his eighth child, Xi Jinping, is the most powerful man in China today.

That’s too bad, because the eventful life of Xi Zhongxun (1913-2002) spanned the messy formative decades of the Chinese Communist Party and is fascinating in its own right. A product of the bloody land revolution that swept rural China in the 1920s, he was the chief lieutenant of a dynamic, pro-Soviet guerilla named Gao Gang, whom Mao Zedong might have anointed as heir—if that man hadn’t been purged and air-brushed from history in the early 1950s.