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His father fled China. It took years for him to talk about it.

The desire to know one’s roots runs deep across most cultures. For Edward Wong, a diplomatic correspondent for The New York Times, learning about his Chinese ancestry has particular resonance. He can trace his origins back more than 30 generations. 

In “At the Edge of Empire: A Family’s Reckoning With China,” Wong investigates his father’s life and the events that led his father to flee China in the 1960s, before Wong was born. Wong is also eager to compare his father’s lived experience with the China that Wong witnessed as a journalist in Beijing for the Times from 2008 to 2016 – the last two years as bureau chief. The result is a multifaceted, deeply personal, and moving account that helps us understand how China has evolved. 

Yook Kearn Wong, the author’s father, was born in Hong Kong in 1932. When the Japanese conquered the British colony at the outbreak of World War II, he moved, along with his family, to his ancestral village in southern China. He survived the Japanese occupation and finished high school in 1950, just after the Communists seized control of the country. Wong’s father quickly embraced the Communist cause and moved to Beijing to attend college in hopes of being part of the effort to build a new China.   

“At the Edge of Empire: A Family’s Reckoning With China,” by Edward Wong, Viking, 464 pp.

Once again, war disrupts Wong’s father’s life. When China enters the Korean War, he drops out of school to join the air force. He enthusiastically completes basic training. But he is stunned to be rejected – without explanation – from enlisting in the air force. Instead, he is sent to the army and assigned to a series of increasingly remote outposts in the country’s northwest provinces.  

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