If Son of Taiwan (
Now sitting near the top of many local self-help book lists, Son of Taiwan starts at the excruciating moment when Chen learned he wasn't going to win re-election as Taipei mayor in 1998. He recounts in detail the thoughts that flashed through his mind in the wake of that painful realization, telling us how he struggled to set his emotions aside so he could give a calming, heart-lifting speech to his most ardent supporters. He took the defeat as a gift from the public that would help prepare him for greater tasks in life.
The details Chen provides are what make this book a worthwhile read. They create a backdrop of hardship and poverty that gives readers a context through which they can measure his success. Details include how during the courtship of his wife, he once mistook the foldable wardrobe in her apartment for a refrigerator because he had never seen a real refrigerator in his life. That's what he says.
Chen took the poverty he was born into as the best possible gift from heaven, he writes. Compelled to strive harder than everyone else, he was the first in his class from grade one all the way to National Taiwan University. He received the highest score on the national bar exam and started practicing law a year before graduation.
The book also recounts all the defining moments in his career.
Chen tells of a political rally he attended as a university freshman, in which he heard a speech given by Huang Hsin-chie (黃信介), which inspired him to abandon a business major to try his hand at law and to join the pro-democracy movement. He writes about the perhaps-not-so-accidental hit-and-run incident that struck his wife instead of him, paralyzing her for life. Chen also writes about his love for his wife and children, his parents and in-laws. Tidbits like these make the book one of the most soulful political memoirs Taiwan has ever seen.
Desperate dads meet in car parks to exchange packets; exhausted parents slip it into their kids’ drinks; families wait months for prescriptions buy it “off label.” But is it worth the risk? “The first time I gave him a gummy, I thought, ‘Oh my God, have I killed him?’ He just passed out in front of the TV. That never happens.” Jen remembers giving her son, David, six, melatonin to help him sleep. She got them from a friend, a pediatrician who gave them to her own child. “It was sort of hilarious. She had half a tub of gummies,
The wide-screen spectacle of Formula One gets a gleaming, rip-roaring workout in Joseph Kosinski’s F1, a fine-tuned machine of a movie that, in its most riveting racing scenes, approaches a kind of high-speed splendor. Kosinski, who last endeavored to put moviegoers in the seat of a fighter jet in Top Gun: Maverick, has moved to the open cockpits of Formula One with much the same affection, if not outright need, for speed. A lot of the same team is back. Jerry Bruckheimer produces. Ehren Kruger, a co-writer on Maverick, takes sole credit here. Hans Zimmer, a co-composer previously, supplies the thumping
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June 23 to June 29 After capturing the walled city of Hsinchu on June 22, 1895, the Japanese hoped to quickly push south and seize control of Taiwan’s entire west coast — but their advance was stalled for more than a month. Not only did local Hakka fighters continue to cause them headaches, resistance forces even attempted to retake the city three times. “We had planned to occupy Anping (Tainan) and Takao (Kaohsiung) as soon as possible, but ever since we took Hsinchu, nearby bandits proclaiming to be ‘righteous people’ (義民) have been destroying train tracks and electrical cables, and gathering in villages