Indie spotlight focusses on self-published authors and self-publishing. Alexa Kang is a Boston-based, Chinese-American author who publishes her Shanghai Story trilogy, World War 2 historical fiction, through her own house, Lakewood Press. You can read about book 1, Shanghai Story, here.
Shanghai Dreams is the second book in the trilogy. It tells the story of Clark Yuan, the Western-educated son of a prominent Chinese family in Shanghai who became a KMT operative, and Eden Levine, a Jewish refugee from Munich who came to Shanghai with her family to seek safety and a new life away from the Hitler regime. One of the characters, John Rabe, is based on a man who existed in real life. Rabe was a Nazi who nevertheless saved many lives.
Alexa here discusses the complexities of depicting a Nazi character in a sympathetic light.
Friday, 7 December 2018
Indie Spotlight: Crystal Watanabe
Indie spotlight focuses on self-publishing and indie authors. When Christie Dao, a Vietnamese-American now based in Singapore, self-published her inspirational book, Actualize Your Dreams, she felt it was important to work with an Asian-American editor. She chose Crystal Watanabe. Here, Christie interviews Crystal.
Friday, 30 November 2018
Indie spotlight: Remembering Shanghai by Claire Chao
Indie spotlight focuses on self-publishing and indie authors.
Hawaii-based, Hong-Kong-born Claire Chao is the co-author, with her mother Isabel Sun Chao, of Remembering Shanghai: A Memoir of Socialites, Scholars and Scoundrels, published by the indie publisher, Plum Brook.
Remembering Shanghai follows five generations of the Chao family over two centuries, from the time of Claire's great-great-grandfather down to the present. Mother and daughter traced their family story as far back as they could. Claire's great-great-grandfather rose from poverty to become a minister to the empress dowager, and built a large portfolio comprising hundreds of properties, a bank and a shipping company.
Isabel Sun Chao, the memoir's main protagonist, grew up the third daughter among six siblings in glamorous 1930s and ’40s Shanghai - everyone’s favorite child, cosseted by servants, wet nurses, cooks, drivers, even a resident tailor.
Soon after Mao came to power in 1949, Isabel journeyed to Hong Kong. Clutching a pink suitcase packed with party dresses to wear on her spring holiday, she didn’t realize that she would never see her father, or her grandmother, again. Claire accompanied her to Shanghai nearly 60 years later to confront her family’s past, one that they would together discover to be by turns harrowing and heartwarming.
Claire here discusses why she and her mother decided to write a family memoir, and gives advice to other indie authors.
Hawaii-based, Hong-Kong-born Claire Chao is the co-author, with her mother Isabel Sun Chao, of Remembering Shanghai: A Memoir of Socialites, Scholars and Scoundrels, published by the indie publisher, Plum Brook.
Remembering Shanghai follows five generations of the Chao family over two centuries, from the time of Claire's great-great-grandfather down to the present. Mother and daughter traced their family story as far back as they could. Claire's great-great-grandfather rose from poverty to become a minister to the empress dowager, and built a large portfolio comprising hundreds of properties, a bank and a shipping company.
Isabel Sun Chao, the memoir's main protagonist, grew up the third daughter among six siblings in glamorous 1930s and ’40s Shanghai - everyone’s favorite child, cosseted by servants, wet nurses, cooks, drivers, even a resident tailor.
Soon after Mao came to power in 1949, Isabel journeyed to Hong Kong. Clutching a pink suitcase packed with party dresses to wear on her spring holiday, she didn’t realize that she would never see her father, or her grandmother, again. Claire accompanied her to Shanghai nearly 60 years later to confront her family’s past, one that they would together discover to be by turns harrowing and heartwarming.
Claire here discusses why she and her mother decided to write a family memoir, and gives advice to other indie authors.
Labels:
China,
Hong Kong,
Indie spotlight,
Memoir
Friday, 23 November 2018
Indie spotlight: Inspiration from Onnagatta and Onna bugeisha
Indie spotlight focuses on self-publishing and indie authors.
K. Bird Lincoln, an American, now lives in the Midwest, but she has previously lived in Japan. She is the author of the medieval Japanese fantasy series, Tiger Lily, which explores the gender-bending lives of rebellious girls living during a period of Japanese history relatively little-known in the West.
Here, K. Bird Lincoln talks to Alexa Kang about Onnagatta and Onna bugeisha, gender-fluid Japanese who inspired her character, Tiger Lily.
K. Bird Lincoln, an American, now lives in the Midwest, but she has previously lived in Japan. She is the author of the medieval Japanese fantasy series, Tiger Lily, which explores the gender-bending lives of rebellious girls living during a period of Japanese history relatively little-known in the West.
Here, K. Bird Lincoln talks to Alexa Kang about Onnagatta and Onna bugeisha, gender-fluid Japanese who inspired her character, Tiger Lily.
Thursday, 22 November 2018
Backlist books: The Home and the World by Rabindranath Tagore
Backlist books is a column by Lucy Day Werts that focuses on enduring, important works from or about Asia.
This post is about The Home and the World, a novel originally published as Ghare Baire in Bengali in 1916. Its author, Rabindranath Tagore, was born in Kolkata, British India. He was a wealthy, well-travelled Bengali writer best known for the poetry collection Gitanjali. In 1913 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
An internationally known literary and artistic man from a wealthy, socially active family owning extensive lands in what is now Bangladesh, Tagore was anti-imperialist yet ultimately rejected the nationalist Swadeshi movement, which promoted production and exclusive consumption of local goods. The Home and the World reflects the author’s mixed feelings on the subject.
See below to find out what you need to know to decide whether you should read The Home and the World, or what you should know about it even if you never do!
This post is about The Home and the World, a novel originally published as Ghare Baire in Bengali in 1916. Its author, Rabindranath Tagore, was born in Kolkata, British India. He was a wealthy, well-travelled Bengali writer best known for the poetry collection Gitanjali. In 1913 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
An internationally known literary and artistic man from a wealthy, socially active family owning extensive lands in what is now Bangladesh, Tagore was anti-imperialist yet ultimately rejected the nationalist Swadeshi movement, which promoted production and exclusive consumption of local goods. The Home and the World reflects the author’s mixed feelings on the subject.
See below to find out what you need to know to decide whether you should read The Home and the World, or what you should know about it even if you never do!
Labels:
Backlist books,
Bangladesh,
India
Friday, 16 November 2018
Obituary for Louis Cha, by John Minford
Louis Cha, or Zha Liangyong, (查良鏞), pen-name Jin Yong (金庸), OBE, Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur, novelist, journalist, entrepreneur and public figure, was born 10th March 1924, Haining County, Zhejiang Province, China, and died 30th October 2018, Hong Kong.
Between 1997 and 2002, John Minford, now Emeritus Professor of Chinese at the Australian National University, brought out a three-volume translation of Cha's The Deer and the Cauldron, with Oxford University Press Hong Kong (OUP HK). Now OUP UK has published it in the UK. John here provides an obituary for Louis Cha.
Between 1997 and 2002, John Minford, now Emeritus Professor of Chinese at the Australian National University, brought out a three-volume translation of Cha's The Deer and the Cauldron, with Oxford University Press Hong Kong (OUP HK). Now OUP UK has published it in the UK. John here provides an obituary for Louis Cha.
Wednesday, 14 November 2018
BALESTIER PRESS, THE ART OF IDEAS — IN TRANSLATION
You think being a small indie publisher
is challenging? Then trying being a small indie publisher who focuses on translations
from Chinese! Today, Nicky Harman interviews Roh-Suan Tung, of Balestier Press, about what
propelled him into publishing, his favourite books and his hopes for the future.
Founded in 2013,
Balestier Press is an independent publisher of Asian literature and books
related to Asia, including novels,
essays and picture books, for children, young adults and adults. Balestier aims
to provide a diverse platform for the different voices in Asia by publishing
the best and most innovative Asian literature. Director Roh-Suan Tung says: “We
hope to promote a greater cultural understanding and awareness of Asia, to tell the story of an evolving Asia through its people, culture, literature and artistic
expressions."
NH Can you tell me how and why you got
into publishing? I understand you came from a science background.
RT
I started by publishing newsletters on
media freedom in Taiwan in the 80s. I then became a theoretical physicist and
served as editor for international journals and academic publishing for a few years.
I enjoyed exploring the frontiers of physics and our understanding of the
cosmos, and I appreciate the value of science, but I’ve always felt the need for
more English-language publications in literary arts and humanities. Partly
because I’ve lived in quite a few major cities in the east and the west.
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