Adet Lin

Adet Lin (Chinese: 林鳳如; pinyin: Lín Fèngrú; Wade–Giles: Lin Feng-ju; May 6, 1923 1971) was a Chinese-American novelist and translator. She also published under the name Tan Yun.[1] She was also known as Lin Rusi.[2]

Adet Lin
Born
Lin Feng-ju

May 6, 1923
Amoy, Republic of China
Died1971 (age 48)
Taipei, Republic of China
Cause of deathSuicide
NationalityAmerican
OccupationNovelist
Spouse(s)Richard Biow
Parent(s)Lin Yutang
FamilyMilton Biow (father-in-law)
Patricia Biow Broderick (sister-in-law)
Matthew Broderick (nephew)

Biography

The oldest daughter of Lin Yutang, she was born in Amoy and came to the United States at the age of thirteen.[1] With her sisters Tai-yi and Mei Mei, she published Our Family, an autobiographical work, in 1939. In 1940, with Tai-yi, she published Girl Rebel, a translation of the autobiography of Xie Bingying. The sisters published a second book, Dawn over Chungking, in 1941. After studying at Columbia University, she went on to work for the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China from 1943 to 1946. Afterwards, she returned to the United States and worked for the United States Information Agency and the Voice of America.[3]

She published her first novel Flame from the Rock in 1943; the book is set in China during the Second Sino-Japanese War.[4]

On May 1, 1946, she married Richard Biow, son of advertising executive Milton Biow.[5][6] Lin killed herself in Taipei in 1971.[2]

Selected works[4]

  • Our Family (1939), with Lin Tai-yi (Anor Lin)
  • Dawn over Chungking (1941), with Lin Tai-yi (Anor Lin) and Lin Mei Mei
  • Flame from the Rock (1943), under pseudonym Tan Yun
  • The Milky Way and Other Chinese Folk Tales (1961)
  • Flower Shadows, translation of Tang dynasty poetry (1970)
gollark: You get... two simulations, one different, presumably?
gollark: I didn't say it was proof, just that it wasn't disproof.
gollark: <@221827050892296192> Those are just maths. There are no *actual* circles to infinite precision in the real world. We just know that the abstract idea of circles and whatnot follows those rules, and matches real-world ones fairly well in most situations.
gollark: Good short story about that: https://qntm.org/responsibility
gollark: I think it's not very productive to try and reason about the desires of the hypothetical simulation-running beings when they're not (necessarily) anything like humans and when the only information we have to work with is our universe.

References

  1. Fister, Barbara (1995). Third World Women's Literatures: A Dictionary and Guide to Materials in English. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 183–84. ISBN 0313289883.
  2. Qian, Suoqiao (2011). Liberal Cosmopolitan: Lin Yutang and Middling Chinese Modernity. p. 252. ISBN 9004192131.
  3. Xu, Wenying (2012). Historical Dictionary of Asian American Literature and Theater. pp. 166–67. ISBN 081087394X.
  4. Nelson, Emmanuel Sampath (2000). Asian American Novelists: A Bio-bibliographical Critical Sourcebook. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 204–06. ISBN 0313309116.
  5. Qian, Suoqiao (October 20, 2017). Lin Yutang and China’s Search for Modern Rebirth. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 396. ISBN 9811046565.
  6. "Adet Lin, 23, daughter of Chinese author Lin Yutang, and her husband, Richard M. Biow, 26, are shown in their apartment in Charlestown, Mass., after their marriage was revealed by the brides father who announced they had eloped". Mount Carmel Item. May 6, 1946.


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