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Overview

A two-year-old biracial American girl brought to China on the eve of the Communist takeover endures societal discrimination and maternal betrayal as she struggles over 30 years to maintain her identity as an American and to return to the United States. Among the first wave of educated youth sent from the cities to the countryside two years before the Cultural Revolution, she spends 9 years in Xinjiang, China's rugged far west. There, as part of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, she travels through the Taklamakan Desert on an unusual mission and faces the Soviet army and near-starvation while forging friendships with the Uyghur inhabitants. Returning to Beijing, she manages to contact the U.S. Liaison Office there to establish her American citizenship in the face of strong opposition from the Chinese government and in 1978 becomes the first American involuntarily held in China to return to the United States since the Korean War. Back in the United States and tasting freedom at last thanks to her resourcefulness and the work of U.S. Department of State officials, she is determined to fit in despite the different culture and the challenges of a new language she was not allowed to learn in China. Her knowledge of Communist China, rare in the United States at that time, makes her a sought-after resource by a number of government offices and private businesses. She marries an American diplomat and travels to Taiwan where she looks to the future with the determination and optimism that have taken her so far.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940162816751
Publisher: Jeffrey Buczacki
Publication date: 08/29/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

About the Author

Han Xiu is the pen name of Teresa Buczacki. The daughter of a United States Army officer and a Chinese student, she was born in New York City but lived in Mainland China for most of her life before the age of thirty-two. She returned to the United States in 1978 and began teaching Chinese at the U.S. Department of State’s Foreign Service Institute and Chinese literature to doctoral students at The Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C. She has published more than forty-five works of fiction and non-fiction in Taiwan and China. The Unwanted, first published in 2012, is her third novel and the second to be translated into English. She lives with her husband in Virginia.

About the Translators

Katherine Lu retired from a Chinese literary magazine in 2008 after seventeen years as its director. She received her MA degree in English from the University of Iowa. Choosing to be a stay-at-home mom, she held several part-time positions including item writer for ACT, test specialist at Riverside Publishing Company, and translator for various organizations. She has been married to her soulmate, Chia-Hsing, for over fifty years. Together they focus on protecting the environment.

Jeffrey Buczacki retired from the U.S. Department of State after twenty-nine years as a Foreign Service Officer. His postings included Kinshasa, New Delhi, Beijing, Kaohsiung (Taiwan), and Athens. He and the author have been married for thirty-eight years.
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