"…Chun Fung Tong's study, entitled State Power and Governance, is a most welcome addition … Tong's book will be essential for any scholar or student researching the Qin dynasty." — Journal of Asian History"…makes an important and quite original contribution to our understanding of the Qin regime. The author may be commended for his careful analysis of new source materials, from which he develops a compelling analysis of some of the interrelated causes for the dynasty's fall. State Power and Governance in Early Imperial China should be read not only by historians of China, but also by scholars interested in a comparative understanding of the internal functioning of early empires." — Journal of Chinese History"This truly is cutting-edge research. Chun Fung Tong's book changes our perception of the Qin, but it does much more than that. Tong grounds his discussion of Qin governance using data and theories from political science, providing us with a much better understanding of how premodern governments worked—or didn't. Next, he provides us with a granular look at the Qin that peels away all the layers of propaganda and bias, demonstrating that the Qin was not a mighty, all-powerful government, but one that was struggling to control all that it had conquered. It was aware of its problems and was actively finding ways to solve them, but, just like modern governments, those solutions often begat new problems or made the original ones worse. This type of realistic portrayal of the Qin is long overdue." — Keith Knapp, The Citadel