The Boy from Clearwater
Book 1
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Freeman Book Award Winner
GLLI Translated YA Book Prize Honoree
An incredible true story in graphic novel form that lays bare the tortured and triumphant history of Taiwan, an island claimed and fought over by many countries, through the life story of a man who lived through its most turbulent times.
Part One: Taiwan, 1930s. Tsai Kun-lin, an ordinary boy born in Chingshui, recounts a carefree childhood despite the Japanese occupation: growing up happily with the company of nursery rhymes and picture books on Chingshui Street. As war emerges Tsai's memories shift to military parades, air raids, and watching others face conscription into the army. It seems no one can escape. After the war, the book-loving teenager tries hard to learn Mandarin and believes he is finally stepping towards a comfortable future; but little does he know, a dark cloud awaits him ahead.
Part Two: Taiwan, 1950s. In his second year at Taichung First Senior High School, Tsai is arrested simply for joining a book club and subsequently tortured, deprived of civil rights, and sent to Green Island for "reformation." Lasting until his release in September 1960, Tsai, a victim of the White Terror era, spends ten years of his youth in prison on an unjust charge. But he is ready to embrace freedom.
Experience parts one and two of the tour-de-force graphic novel series that took Taiwan by storm – parts three and four coming May 2024.
P R A I S E
★ “The stupendous achievements here are many: a synergistic literary success; a historic record of twentieth-century Taiwan; the remarkable account of a boy’s life; and a triumph of translation.”
—Booklist (starred)
“A story of persistence, both hopeful and chilling, and a powerful vision of the personal implications of Taiwan’s mid-century history.”
—School Library Journal
“Stunning.” —Kirkus
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Told in two parts, this haunting true story by Yu chronicles a resilient boy's experience navigating turbulent times in Taiwan. Part one, "The Boy Who Loves to Read," recounts how Tsai Kun-Lin (1930–2023) was born in Taichung during the 1930s Japanese occupation of Taiwan. His ordinary yet happy upbringing, rendered in soft b&w pencil art with pink accents, is filled with music and friendship. As natural disasters such as earthquakes devastate his region, and as war looms, his once joyful childhood gives way to air raids, conscription, and a feeling that his future in Taiwan was bleak—a nightmare manifested when, at 19, Tsai is arrested and tortured on false charges. Part two, "Ten Years on Green Island," follows Tsai's arrival to a correctional facility on Green Island as one of many victims of China's political oppression of Taiwanese peoples called the White Terror. Zhou's illustrations reflect the story's dark turn, morphing into inky, deco, noir-inspired art shot through with blue shocks of color. This harrowing debut, which depicts an underreported period in Taiwan's history, is informative and inspiring for Tsai's ebullient hope and resilience. Footnotes add historical context throughout; a concluding timeline provides further information. Ages 12–up.