I also recalled how, when I came back three years after that for my nextvisit, I did a double take (or, rather, several of them) when I took my firstlook at the sleek new public library on Huaihai Road, in what had once been thecity’s French Concession. The building was unexpectedly impressive, but othersthings about it surprised me even more than its elegance and escalators. One was that patrons had open access to 1940s issues of a Nationalist Partynewspaper that, while doing my doctoral research in the old public library inthe 1980s, I had spent weeks trying to find and then get permission to consult.Another thing that surprised me, as someone whose images of Shanghai were formedin the 1980s, when the only representations of historical figures you saw inpublic were big statues of Mao and smaller monuments to lesser revolutionaryheroes, was the effigy of a kindly looking Confucius standing in the Library’sback garden. Two final things that were unexpected, but which fit with thelocation in a district under French control from the 1840s through the 1940s,were that you could buy a passable croissant at its café and a variety of worksby Parisian literary critic Roland Barthes in its bookstore.