The Woman Who Could Not Forget: Iris Chang Before and Beyond The Rape of Nanking: A Memoir
A moving, illuminating memoir about the life of world-famous author and historian, Iris Chang, as told by her mother.Iris Chang's best-selling book The Rape of Nanking forever changed the way we view the Second World War in Asia. It all began with a photo of a river choked with the bodies of...
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A moving, illuminating memoir about the life of world-famous author and historian, Iris Chang, as told by her mother.Iris Chang's best-selling book The Rape of Nanking forever changed the way we view the Second World War in Asia. It all began with a photo of a river choked with the bodies of hundreds of Chinese civilians that shook Iris to her core. Who were these people? Why had this happened and how could their story have been lost to history? She could not shake that image from her head. She could not forget what she had seen. A few short years later, Chang revealed this "second Holocaust" to the world. The Japanese atrocities against the people of Nanking were so extreme that a Nazi party leader based in China actually petitioned Hitler to ask the Japanese government to stop the massacre. But who was this woman that single-handedly swept away years of silence, secrecy and shame? Her mother, Ying-Ying, provides an enlightened and nuanced look at her daughter, from Iris' home-made childhood newspaper, to her early years as a journalist and later, as a promising young historian, her struggles with her son's autism and her tragic suicide. The Woman Who Could Not Forget cements Iris' legacy as one of the most extraordinary minds of her generation and reveals the depth and beauty of the bond between a mother and daughter.The Woman Who Could Not Forget won 2012 Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association (APALA) Awards for Literature in Adult Non-Fiction category.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9781605981727 (1605981729)
Publish date: May 15th 2011
Publisher: Pegasus
Pages no: 400
Edition language: English
Written by Chang's mother, this is an honest, straightforward account of the author's life and work, and suicide in 2004. The memoir is informative but not terribly insightful. It's interesting to compare this it with Finding Iris Chang written by a friend of Chang, a book which Ying-Ying Chang does...