The Concubine's Daughter

A Hong Kong Story

by Helen Kwok


Formats

Softcover
$19.95
$13.50
Softcover
$13.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 3/31/2003

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 344
ISBN : 9781410717436

About the Book

The Concubine's Daughter is a snapshot of a bygone era, depicting life in the British colony of Hong Kong in the fifties and sixties. It is the story Elizabeth Lee, beautiful, intelligent, and liberated, from the time she is a wide-eyed eighteen year-old studying English Literature at the University of Hong Kong, sharing girlish secrets with her two best friends, to her becoming an academic at the University, to just after her thirtieth birthday, when she leaves Hong Kong with her husband and young son for the US, frightened in part by the riots inspired by the Cultural Revolution taking place across the border in mainland China. After twenty years in the US she returns to Hong Kong in 1986, just ten years before China is to regain sovereignty over the colony.

Educated in English Elizabeth is keenly aware of the conflict within herself between her love of certain aspects of Western culture and her Chinese heritage. Living in that period of the colony's history, and largely divorced from the cultural life of the Chinese mainland, she is conscious of a sense of isolation. Discriminatory attitudes and actions, whether based on gender, race, or language, are very much a fact of life in Hong Kong during this period.

The subject matter is original. The narrative style is witty, mildly sarcastic, and humorous in places. The vivid depiction of social customs and manners and memorable characters from different strata of society contribute to make The Concubine's Daughter a book well worth reading.


About the Author

Born in Guangzhou, China, and having lived in New York, London, as well as places in southern China, Helen Chang spent almost half a century in colonial Hong Kong before moving to the US in 1993, where she now resides with her husband in Newton, Massachusetts. Chinese by birth and educated primarily in English, the author has an intimate knowledge about Hong Kong and its people, and was herself very much a part of the Hong Kong scene, and is therefore well able to capture the essence of the city, where the East meets the West, where the two cultures are continually blending and clashing.

Kwok left the University of Hong Kong in 1993 to move to the US, after a teaching career in the English Department spanning over three decades. As an academic she has published works both in Hong Kong as well as internationally, on Linguistics, English Language and Literature, and Translation. The Concubine's Daughter is her first attempt at writing fiction.