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Review | Tale of two Chinas – Taiwan and mainland, cosmopolitan and provincial – by Lo Yi-Chin, Faraway is a novelistic memoir about a father’s illness and a son’s dilemma
- Lo Yi-Chin’s memoir about the forces of illness, duty and bureaucracy sees its lead character torn between meeting the needs of a sick father and pregnant wife
- Faraway’s literariness references Italo Calvino, Gabriel García Márquez, Paul Theroux and V.S. Naipaul. But its terrain is that of two Chinas
Reading Time:3 minutes
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![Lo Yi-Chin’s Faraway describes the tribulations of a son returning to mainland China from Taiwan to take his hospitalised father to the self-ruled island. The Taiwanese author mines the situation for comedy. Photo: Getty Images](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2021/09/11/4a1383c0-9eaa-487c-a3e3-d4e4d036b870_81f30697.jpg?itok=qJKJtrGO&v=1631344154)
Faraway by Lo Yi-Chin (translated by Jeremy Tiang), pub. Columbia University Press
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The latest work from Taiwanese author Lo Yi-Chin is a novelistic memoir, set between Taiwan and mainland China at the turn of this century.
Or perhaps it’s a novel where the main character shares the name of the author. According to its translator, “When I pressed him as to how much of the story was fictional, he claimed not to remember.”
Either way, Faraway is a work of deep introspection and sometimes overflowing imagery, a meditation on ageing and family, a memoir or novel of the wearing forces of illness, duty and bureaucracy.
![The cover of Lo’s book. The cover of Lo’s book.](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2021/09/11/57783471-73f6-49f0-9603-8feb2f546f05_4ac63e52.jpg)
It tells the painful story of Lo Yi-Chin’s journey to mainland China to bring back his aged and critically ill father.
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