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Voices From China
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18366 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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9 / 1990 |
2,935 Words |
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Scarlet Cheng Scarlet Cheng, based in Los Angeles, is a contributing editor
to the arts section of The World & I. |
LEGACIES: A CHINESE MOSAIC
Bette Bao Lord
New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1990
246 pp., $19.95
On the anniversary of the Tiananmen Massacre, Chinese student-leader-in-exile Chai Ling led a vigil across from the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., to honor those who had been slain. “I want to open people's eyes to what is happening in my country. I want to say don't forget those who died, and don't forget the people who are still suffering,” she said.
The same urgent passion propels Bette Bao Lord in her latest Work, Legacies: A Chinese Mosaic. The China-born, best-selling author has produced a moving and skillful interweave of her family's history with the life stories of other Chinese caught up in the brutal storm of Chinese communism - who lived to tell the tale. “If my friends' stories are the pieces of the mosaic,” she explained to me in a recent interview, “I feel that my story and the story of my family give it a context or glue with history. And, of course, the headlines of Tiananmen Square give it resonance with today.”
Born Shanghai
Born in Shanghai in 1938, Bette Bao Lord left China when she was eight and with her family settled in Brooklyn. Like many Chinese mothers, Mrs. Bao pushed her daughter toward a practical career. However, at Tufts University Bette was failing chemistry and decided to take up history instead. Later she went on to study international relations at the Fletcher School of
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