It’s Banned Books Week and we have an exclusive look at The Boy From Clearwater. It comes to shelves November 21st from Yu Pei-Yun and Zhou Jian-Xin, translated by Lin King, and published by Levine Querido.
Tsai Kun-lin, an ordinary boy, was born in Qingshui, Taichung in 1930s Taiwan. Part one depicts a carefree childhood despite the Japanese occupation: growing up happily with the company of nursery rhymes and picture books on Qingshui 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 opens with illustrations reminiscent of woodcuts showing the soul-crushing experience of Tsai’s detention and imprisonment. In his second year of high school, Tsai attends a book club hosted by his teacher and is consequently arrested on a false charge of taking part in an “illegal” assembly. After being tortured, he is sentenced to ten years in prison, deprived of civil rights for seven years, and sent to Green Island for “reformation.” Lasting until his release in September 1960, Tsai, a victim of the White Terror era, spent his youth in prison on an unjust charge.
This excerpt of The Boy from Clearwater depicts the events for which Tsai Kun-Lin was arrested and imprisoned for a decade: attending a high school book club coordinated and sponsored by his teacher.
This site contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from these sites. Making purchases through these links helps support the site.
Source: Graphic Policy