Reseña del editor:
The author of China Boy describes the coming together of his parents--his mother, the daughter of a forward-thinking father who shuns ancient Chinese tradition, and his father, a young pilot who tried to kill Mao Tse-tung and fled China in search of his screen idol, Katherine Hepburn--in a memoir about the clash between cultural ties and a traditional way of life. 30,000 first printing.
Nota de la solapa:
g Hepburn is the story of the Lee family—a saga spanning four generations, two continents, and a century and a half of Chinese history. In the masterful hands of acclaimed author Gus Lee, his ancestors’ stories spring vividly to life in a memoir with all the richness of great fiction.
From the time of her birth in 1906 it was expected that Gus Lee’s mother, Tzu Da-tsien, would become an elegant bride for a wealthy provincial man. But she was shunted onto a less certain path by age three, when her warmhearted father rescued her from her foot-binding ceremony in response to her terrified screams. This dramatic rejection of tradition was the first of many clashes that would lock the family in a constant struggle between Chinese customs and modern ways.
Later, with the Chinese countryside in the grip of civil war, the Tzu family moved to Shanghai, seeking financial stability. There Da-tsien met Lee Zee Zee, the dashing son of the Tzus’ landlord,
"Sobre este título" puede pertenecer a otra edición de este libro.