Home in Two Cities

2011

★ 2011 Taipei Film Festival – Nominee for Best Documentary

Little Eiko from the south side of Peking came to the south side of Taipei, growing into the irreplaceable “Ms. Lin Hai-yin” in the Chinese literary world. Home in Two Cities tells the story from the perspective of Lin Hai-yin’s special background of having “two homelands”. With the heartfelt narration from her daughter Julie Chang, we enter her life and see her desk, the editor’s office, and how she fearlessly handled the challenges in that era of censorship and suppression; we set our feet in her garden of literature. Due to the inclusiveness and amiability of her personality and works, Lin Hai-yin’s novels stand the test of time, becoming a common memory for cross-strait readers. She is not only a friend to writers, but also a selfless and audacious mother, safeguarding the post-war Taiwanese literature from infancy to adulthood.

Lin Hai-yin (1918-2001) stood firmly against the political oppression when she was the editor of the literary page of the United Daily News, discovering promising writers, such as Lin Hwai-min, Qi Deng-Sheng, Huang Chun-ming, Zheng Qing-wen, and Zhong Li-ho. She also founded the Belles-Lettres Publishing House. Her living room was described as “half a literary circle”, and she is always remembered respectably as “Ms. Lin Hai-yin”. Her novel Memories of Peking: South Side Stories about her childhood when she lived in the south side of Beijing was published in 1960, and earned her a legendary status in the literary world.

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