Miah - Softcover

Lin, Julia

 
9781894770996: Miah

Inhaltsangabe

"Half century under Japan then half century under Kuomintang . . .too much,? my mother would sigh and shake her head." Miah means "fate" in Taiwanese. Spanning much of the twentieth century, these linked, subtly understated stories trace the destinies of simple folk from the brutal Japanese occupation of the early twentieth century through to the "White Terror" of the exiled Chinese Mainlanders and the Kuomintang, and finally to modern Taiwan and Canada. In the powerfully gripping "Miah," a woman from Vancouver accompanies her mother to Taiwan for her grandmother Ah Mah?s funeral. There she discovers the tragic story of Fifth Uncle, who was hounded by Kuomintang forces until he took pesticides and died . . . In "The Colonel and Mrs Wang" a Mainlander officer and his Taiwanese-raised son confront each other over politics. One day, the son is betrayed to the authorities. Who was the anonymous informer? . . . In the touching story "Lysander," a modern day Taiwanese boy is sent to Vancouver for his education. A diamond cannot be polished without friction, he has been taught. He must bear the hardship in an alien teenage culture where he tries to desperately cope and eventually loses himself. Miah is a rare look at Taiwanese and modern Canadian life, historical, and personal, and completely honest.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Julia Lin was born in Taiwan and lived there and in Vietnam before her family immigrated to Canada when she was nine. Since then, Julia has lived in Vancouver and its environs, Toronto, and northern British Columbia. She holds a graduate degree in Immunology (M.Sc., University of Toronto) and a post-graduate degree in computing education (University of British Columbia) and has taught high school math, science, and computing science in British Columbia for a number of years. Julia lives in Vancouver.

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"?alf century under Japan then half century underKuomintang . . .too much,' my mother would sigh and shake her head."
Miah means "fate" in Taiwanese. Spanning much of thetwentieth century, these linked, subtly understated storiestrace the destinies of simple folk from the brutal Japaneseoccupation of the early twentieth century through to the "White Terror" of the exiled Chinese Mainlanders and the Kuomintang, and finally to modern Taiwan and Canada.
In the powerfully gripping "Miah," a girl from Vancouveraccompanies her mother to Taiwan for her grandmotherAh Mah's funeral. There she discovers the tragic story ofFifth Uncle, who was hounded by Kuomintang forces untilhe took pesticides and died . . . In "The Colonel and MrsWang" a Mainlander officer and his Taiwanese-raised son confront each other over politics. One day, the son is betrayed to the authorities. Who was the anonymousinformer? . . . In the touching story "Lysander," a modernday Taiwanese boy is sent to Vancouver for his education. Adiamond cannot be polished without friction, he has beentaught. He must bear the hardship in an alien teenageculture where he tries to desperately cope and eventually loses himself.
Miah is a rare look at Taiwanese and modern Canadianlife, historical, and personal, and completely honest.

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