PSX5Central
Non Gaming Discussions => Off-Topic => Topic started by: Coredweller on November 14, 2004, 09:06:55 AM
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If ODB deserves a thread, then she should get one too. If you\'ve never read "The Rape of Nanking" I would recommend that you do so. I read it several years ago, and I\'ve greatly admired her ever since. This makes me sad. That\'s all I can say about it.
(https://psx5central.com/community/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sfgate.com%2Fc%2Fpictures%2F2004%2F11%2F11%2Fmn_chang101.jpg&hash=10c82020739679d8d038ad858d6c62c9dbbefd31)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/11/11/MNGB59PKL01.DTL
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6456679/
Author Iris Chang found dead
Investigators say she shot herselfThe Associated Press
Updated: 10:53 p.m. ET Nov. 10, 2004LOS GATOS, Calif. - Iris Chang, a best-selling author who chronicled the Japanese occupation of China and the history of Chinese immigrants in the United States, was found dead in her car of a self-inflicted gunshot, authorities said Wednesday. She was 36.
Chang, who won critical acclaim for her books “The Rape of Nanking” and “The Chinese in America,” was found along Highway 17 just south of Los Gatos, Santa Clara County authorities said. On Tuesday morning, a motorist noticed her car parked on a side road, checked the vehicle and called police.
The official cause of death has not been released, but investigators concluded that Chang, who was hospitalized recently for a breakdown, shot herself in the head. She lived in San Jose with her husband and 2-year-old son.
Born in Princeton, N.J., in 1968 and raised in Champaign-Urbana, Ill., Chang earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism at the University of Illinois and a master’s in science writing at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Chang worked briefly as a reporter for The Associated Press and the Chicago Tribune before leaving daily journalism to pursue her own writing. At age 25, she published her first book, “Thread of the Silkworm,” which tells the story of Tsien Hsue-shen, the Chinese-born physicist who pioneered China’s missile program after being driven from the United States during the Cold War.
In 1997, Chang published the international bestseller “The Rape of Nanking,” which described the rape, torture and killing of hundreds of thousands of Chinese civilians by Japanese soldiers in the former Chinese capital during the late 1930s. “The Chinese in America,” published last year, is a history of Chinese immigrants and their descendants in the United States.
The late historian Stephen Ambrose described Chang as “maybe the best young historian we’ve got, because she understands that to communicate history, you’ve got to tell the story in an interesting way.”
Chang suffered a breakdown and was hospitalized during a recent trip researching her fourth book about U.S. soldiers who fought the Japanese in the Philippines during World War II, according to her former editor and agent Susan Rabiner.
Chang continued to suffer from depression after she was released from the hospital. In a note to her family, she asked to be remembered as the person she was before she became ill — “engaged with life, committed to her causes, her writing and her family,” Rabiner said.
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Wish i could add but considering im not the biggest book head, i cant really say that i know her or her writing.
Anyway - RIP
+1 oh yeh!
JK
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Holy........Shit. Why the hell?
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Damn, all sad stuff latley. :(
We should make threads for people before they die. that\'d be nicer. :)
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Damn, I just remembered that my copy of "The Rape of Nanking" is autographed by Iris Chang. I was dating a chinese woman a few years back, and she met Chang at a community event in the San Gabriel valley. My friend got the book autographed for me.
It\'s weird that I forgot that until now.
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ebay that bastard
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I have Christopher Reeve\'s autograph.
+1
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I also have Stevie Ray Vaughan\'s autograph. Another friend got that for me in the parking lot outside the David Letterman show back in the 80\'s. I think that trumps everything unless you have Elvis or Hendrix.
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I have a Babe Ruth signed baseball in mint condition that my great grandpa had signed *not really*
Actually, I went to a garage sale and bought this picture of Elvis in a frame for 25 cents...and then sold it on eBay and got 30 bucks for it ;) I\'d say that\'s a pretty good profit.
As for the Iris Chang thing, I\'m sorry to hear that. I\'ve never heard of her, but maybe I\'ll try and give that book a look. Since I read a LOT.
R.I.P.
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Originally posted by Coredweller
I also have Stevie Ray Vaughan\'s autograph. Another friend got that for me in the parking lot outside the David Letterman show back in the 80\'s. I think that trumps everything unless you have Elvis or Hendrix.
Well, he isn\'t a cripple dead guy.
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i think anyone thats dead is somehow crippled....
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^^^^^
Not really...I think they\'re just dead...
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Never heard of this author but RIP.
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Originally posted by EviscerationX
^^^^^
Not really...I think they\'re just dead...
Wondered if anyone would say something.
OK, he\'s a Dead crippled guy.