Gan Yao Ming

Gan Yao-Ming (Chinese: 甘耀明; born Feb 2, 1972) is a Taiwanese author from Miaoli County. He graduated from the Chinese department of Tunghai University. He earned a master's degree in Creative Writing and English Literature from Tunghua University. Before becoming a full-time fiction writer, Gan worked as a reporter,as a middle school teacher, and as a playwright of a small theater. Widely recognized as one of the best authors of his generation, Gan has received various literary awards, including the United Daily News Literature Prize, the Lin Rong-San Literature Prize,[1] Wu Zhuo-liu Literature Prize,[2] and the United Daily New Novelist Prize. Several of his novels have been adapted into television series. He has also served as writer-in-residence at Providence University.

About Gan Yao Ming's Work

Owing to his Hakka origin, Gan's writings are often colored with Hakka language, culture and history. In addition, Gan often uses dense imagery while appropriating elements from fairy tale, fable, and folklore. As a result, the feelings of humans and animals become interchangeable but at the same time remain distinct; the complex interactions among Taiwan's various ethnic and social groups are revealed as well. Gan is best known for the following two books:

The School of Water-ghosts and the Otter Who Lost His Mother melds various fairy-tale elements together; it received the China Times Annual Top 10 Book Award, with critics calling it that year′s "most creative novel".

Killing the Ghost, a historical novel, deals with issues of Taiwanese identities resulting from fifty years of the Japanese occupation and from the iron-fist rule of the KMT after World War II. Gan Yao-ming, against the backdrops of the Kominka Movement (the Japanization of Taiwanese Movement in 1937 during the second Sino-Japan War)and the 228 Incident (the cause of the KMT's enforcement of martial law on Taiwan from 1947 to 1987), depicts the insanity of that era as well as the unfailing vitality of people living on the island of Taiwan, be they post-World War II Mainland Chinese emigres, or the natives formerly colonized by the Japanese.

List of all Works

Novels:

Essays

References

  1. (in Chinese)
  2. (in Chinese)
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