Li Cunxin

Li Cunxin was born in 1961, in the New Village, Li Commune, near the city of Qingdao on the coast of north-east China. The sixth of seven sons in a poor rural family, Li's peasant life in Chairman Mao's communist China changed dramatically when, at the age of eleven, he was chosen by Madame Mao's cultural advisers to become a student at the Beijing Dance Academy. After a summer school in America, for which he was one of only two students chosen, he defected to the West and became a principal dancer for the Housten Ballet.

Li went on to become one of the best male dancers in the world. He is now a senior manager in a major stockbroking firm and lives in Melbourne, Australia, with his wife Mary and their three children, Sophie, Tom and Bridie.

Li's autobiography, Mao's Last Dancer has sold over 400,000 copies and has been published in over 20 countries. A children's version of the book was released in 2005.


Awards

Australian Book Industry Awards
Winner in 2008 for Peasant Prince (Children's Book)
Short-listed in 2008 for Mao's Last Dancer (International Success)
Australian Booksellers Association
Joint winner in 2004 for Mao's Last Dancer (-)
CBC Book of the Year
Honour Book in 2008 for Peasant Prince (Picture Book)
COOL Award
Short-listed in 2008 for Mao's Last Dancer: Young Readers Edition (Fiction for Years 7-9)
Courier Mail Book of the Year
Short-listed in 2004 for Mao's Last Dancer (-)
Kids Own Aust Literature Award (KOALA)
Winner in 2008 for Mao's Last Dancer: Young Readers Edition (Fiction for Years 7-9)
KROC Award
Short-listed in 2008 for Mao's Last Dancer: Young Readers Edition (Fiction for Years 7-9)
National Biography Award
Short-listed in 2005 for Mao's Last Dancer (Autobiography/biography)
NSW Premier's Literary Award
Winner in 2008 for Peasant Prince (Patricia Wrightson Awd)
NSW Premier's Literary Awards
Winner in 2008 for Peasant Prince (Patricia Wrightson Awd)
Qld Premier's Literary Award
Winner in 2008 for Peasant Prince (Children's Book)
Westfield/Waverley Library Award (NSW)
Short-listed in 2004 for Mao's Last Dancer (-)
Young Aust Best Book Award (YABBA)
Winner in 2008 for Mao's Last Dancer: Young Readers Edition (Fiction for Years 7-9)

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