Alice Poon's Blog, page 19

February 25, 2014

My Review of "Not the Slightest Chance: The Defence of Hong Kong 1941

This is a factual and blood-curdling slideshow of the eighteen days of horrifying fighting against the Japanese in Hong Kong in the not-too-distant past.

I belong to the post-50s group who were lucky enough to be born just after the war. While I was growing up, my mother and relatives belonging to her generation seldom talked about their war-time experiences. It was only recently that I heard about some traumatic personal stories told by a primary school teacher of mine, which ignited my interest in reading books about war-time Hong Kong. Reading "Not the Slightest Chance" had a bone-chilling effect on me, and it makes me want to read more.

The valiant men and women who sacrificed their lives (some suffering unspeakable tortures in enemies' hands) either in action during the war or later in concentration camps in the defense of Hong Kong deserve our and our past generation's utmost and lasting respect and commemoration. The fact that the Hong Kong garrison (or at least the high-ranking officers) were well aware that Hong Kong was in an untenable position, but nonetheless resisted the Japanese invasion with dauntless courage, makes this part of Hong Kong's history especially poignant.

The book just makes me ponder as to why the Chinese Communists and Nationalists were conspicuously absent from the scene of the battle.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 25, 2014 12:53 Tags: battle-of-hong-kong, hong-kong-history, world-war-ii

February 20, 2014

HK Blogger Big Lychee's Review of "Fated and Fateless"

Hong Kong blogger BigLychee (formerly Hemlock) had this to say about "Fated and Fateless":

“Don’t be fooled by the girly cover. Set in the 1950s-80s era, it’s (judging by the first few chapters) a tale of good versus evil, in which the rags-to-riches heroine works her way up into a position where she might be able to turn one of Hong Kong’s notoriously greedy, cheating real-estate empires into a force for social good, only to come up against a property tycoon’s spoilt daughter, who apparently comes to some sort of sticky end – hopefully, vividly portrayed and extremely unpleasant. It’s sort of Land and the Ruling Class: the Movie. There is possibly a dash of autobiography, as per a first novel; there are also plentiful resemblances to actual people, living or dead, which are of course entirely coincidental. Strictly for hard-core fans of Hongkongiana, obviously, though if/when it appears in Chinese, it could strike a chord like its non-fiction predecessor.”
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 20, 2014 14:54 Tags: books-set-in-hong-kong, hong-kong-novel