Lin Tai-yi

Lin Tai-yi (Chinese: 林太乙; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lîm Thài-it; April 1, 1926[1] July 2003)[2] was a Chinese-American writer and translator. She was also known as Anor Lin or Lin Wu-Shuang.[3]

The daughter of Lin Yutang, she was born in Beijing[1] and came to the United States with her family when she was ten. Lin was educated at Columbia University. She taught Chinese at Yale. She married R. Ming Lai,[4] a Hong Kong official and the couple moved to Hong Kong. Lin was editor for the Hong Kong Reader's Digest from 1965 to 1988.[3] She also wrote for various magazines.[1] Lin and her family moved to Washington, D.C. in 1988.[5]

She wrote her first novel War Tide (1943) at the age of 17.[4]

Her sister Adet Lin was also a writer. The two sisters translated Girl Rebel, the autobiography of Xie Bingying.[1]

Selected works[1]

  • Our Family, autobiography (1939) with Adet Lin and Mei Mei Lin[4]
  • Dawn over Chungking, autobiography (1941) with Adet Lin[4]
  • War Tide, novel (1943)
  • The Golden Coin, novel (1946)
  • The Eavesdropper, novel (1959)
  • The Lilacs Overgrow, novel (1960)
  • Kampoon Street, novel (1964)
gollark: As opposed to the upcoming MacronOS™.
gollark: Imagine utilizing Windows, especially 11.
gollark: Macron idea: Macron is just Minoteaur's scripting language.
gollark: There exist tabless browsoids.
gollark: Macron idea: one code point = 1 instruction, have a tape of 8-byte integer values.

References

  1. Fister, Barbara (1995). Third World Women's Literatures: A Dictionary and Guide to Materials in English. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 184. ISBN 0313289883.
  2. "Obituary" (PDF). Bulletin of the Hong Kong Translation Society (42): 11. 2003.
  3. Xu, Wenying (2012). Historical Dictionary of Asian American Literature and Theater. pp. 168–69. ISBN 0810855771.
  4. Nelson, Emmanuel Sampath (2000). Asian American Novelists: A Bio-bibliographical Critical Sourcebook. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 360–63. ISBN 0313309116.
  5. Hamrin, Carol Lee; Bieler, Stacey (2011). Salt and Light: More Lives of Faith That Shaped Modern China. Volume 3. p. 157. ISBN 1621892905.




This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.