现代中国 List of Authors
Yu GuangzhongYi MingLi ShutongZhao Chao
Qian MuBai YangYue NaYi Zhongtian
Lin YutangZhao BaitianChin ShunshinZi Jinshan
Wang LiqiMa FeibaiLa HuasanrenZhu Qianzhi
Wang MingMa XulunLiu WuOuyang Jingmo
Dao YuanfashiAn HuafashiYuan LvkunCen Zhongmian
Xia LanxinHu ShiWang MengMei Chaorong
Li YongCheng JunyiLiu XuyiZhang Haiou
Yu QiuyuCeng ShijiangZhang XiaojieYu Dan
Kong JianWang LiqunLi LingXu Jinru
Yang HaoouMa JunZhao LinKong Qingdong
Fang ErjiaQian WenzhongYao GanmingLi Gangtian
Ma MingdaYang HongQian ShaowuCui Lequan
Zhao ShiminHuang PiaominYan ShianZhi An
Feng ShiBai YunxiangNa HuaijinLiu Dejiang
Lin Yutang
现代中国  (October 10, 1895 ADMarch 26, 1976 AD)
Township: 福建漳州

prose《孤崖一枝花》
《大自然的享受》
《秋天的况味》
Chinese classic《京华烟云》
scribble《中国人之聪明》
《冬至之晨杀人记》
《让娘儿们干一下吧!》
《祝土匪》
《论政治病》
《奉旨不哭不笑》
《脸与法治》
《论解嘲》
essay《人生不过如此》
《说避暑之益》
《纪元旦》
《我的戒烟》
Biography《武则天正传》
local chronicles《大城北京》
distaff skies《女人》
mandarin duck buckeye《朱门》
Author critical biography《林语堂自传》
narrative educe《风声鹤唳》
Confucian classics comment《左手孔子右手老子》
swan critical biography《苏东坡传》
civility apprehend《中国人的国民性》
《粘指民族》
《吾国与吾民》
《生活的艺术》
《中国人的生活智慧》
《中国人的智慧》
to pursue a goal with determination be moved and comprehend《人生的盛宴》
Scholar《鲁迅之死》
林语堂:一个人彻悟的程度,恰等于他所受痛苦的深度
名言警句
你且能哭即哭吧!
社会十大俗气

Read works of Lin Yutang at 历史大观
Read works of Lin Yutang at 小说之家
Read works of Lin Yutang at 散文天地
Read works of Lin Yutang at 旅游地理
Read works of Lin Yutang at 百家争鸣
Read works of Lin Yutang at 诗海
林语堂
  Lin Yutang (October 10, 1895 – March 26, 1976) was a Chinese writer and inventor whose original works and translations of classic Chinese texts into English became very popular in the West.
  
  Lin was born in the town of Banzi in Zhangzhou Fujian province in southeastern China. This mountainous region made a deep impression on his consciousness, and thereafter he would constantly consider himself a child of the mountains (in one of his books he commented that his idea of hell was a city apartment). His father was a Christian minister. His journey of faith from Christianity to Taoism and Buddhism, and back to Christianity in his later life was recorded in his book From Pagan to Christian (1959)
  
  Lin studied for his bachelor's degree at Saint John's University in Shanghai, then received a half-scholarship to continue study for a doctoral degree at Harvard University. He left Harvard early however, moving to France and eventually to Germany, where he completed his requirements for a doctoral degree (in Chinese) at the University of Leipzig. From 1923 to 1926 he taught English literature at Peking University. On his return to the United States in 1931, he was briefly detained for inspection at Ellis Island.
  
  Dr. Lin was very active in the popularization of classical Chinese literature in the West, as well as the general Chinese attitude towards life. He worked to formulate a new method of romanizing the Chinese language, and created an indexing system for Chinese characters.
  
  He was interested in mechanics. Since Chinese is a character-based rather than an alphabet-based language, with many thousands of separate characters, it has always been difficult to employ modern printing technologies. For many years it was doubted that a Chinese typewriter could be invented. Lin, however, worked on this problem for decades and eventually came up with a workable typewriter -- brought to market in the middle of the war with Japan.
  
  He also invented and patented several lesser inventions such as a toothbrush with toothpaste dispensing.
  
  After 1928 he lived mainly in the United States, where his translations of Chinese texts remained popular for many years. His many works represent an attempt to bridge the cultural gap between the East and the West. He was frequently nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.
  
  His first two books, My Country and My People (吾國与吾民,吾国与吾民) (1935) and The Importance of Living (生活的藝術,生活的艺术) (1937), written in English in a charming and witty style, brought him international fame. Others include Between Tears and Laughter (啼笑皆非) (1943), The Importance of Understanding (1960, a book of translated Chinese literary passages and short pieces), The Chinese Theory of Art (1967), and the novels Moment in Peking (京華煙雲,京华烟云) (1939) and The Vermillion Gate (朱門,朱门) (1953), Chinese-English Dictionary of Modern Usage (當代漢英辭典,当代汉英词典) (1973).
  
  His wife, Lin Tsui-feng was a cookbook author whose authentic recipes did a great deal to popularize the art of Chinese cookery in America. Dr. Lin wrote an introduction to one of her and their daughter Lin Hsiang Ju's (林相如) collections of Chinese recipes. His second daughter, Lin Tai-Yi (林太乙) was the general editor of Chinese Readers' Digest from 1965 until her retirement in 1988.
  
  Dr. Lin was buried at his home in Yangmingshan, Taipei, Taiwan. His home has been turned into a museum, which is operated by Taipei-based Soochow University. The town of Lin's birth, Banzi, has also preserved the original Lin home and turned it into a museum.
  
  in China, Kelly and Walsh
  (1937) The Importance of Living, Reynal & Hitchcock, Inc., (A John Day Book)
  (1938) The Wisdom of Confucius, Random House, The Modern Library
  (1939) Moment in Peking, A John Day Book Company
  (1940) With Love & Irony, A John Day Book Company
  (1940) Leaf in the Storm, A John Day Book Company
  (1942) The Wisdom of China and India, Random House
  (1943) Between Tears & Laughter, A John Day Book Company
  (1944) The Vigil of Nation, A John Day Book Company
  (1947) The Gay Genius: The Life and Times of Su Tungpo, A John Day Book Company
  (1948) Chinatown Family, A John Day Book Company
  (1948) The Wisdom of Laotse, Random House
  (1950) On the Wisdom of America, A John Day Book Company
  (1951) Widow, Nun and Courtesan: Three Novelettes From the Chinese Translated and Adapted by Lin Yutang, A John Day Book Company
  (1952) Famous Chinese Short Stories, Retold by Lin Yutang, A John Day Book Company
  (1953) The Vermilion Gate, A John Day Book Company
  (1955) Looking Beyond, Prentice Hall (Published in England as The Unexpected island, Heinemann)
  (1957) Lady Wu, World Publishing Company
  (1958) The Secret Name, Farrar, Straus and Cudahy
  (1959) The Chinese Way of Life, World Publishing Company
  (1959) From Pagan to Christianity, World Publishing Company
  (1960) Imperial Peking: Seven Centuries of China, Crown Publishers
  (1960) The Importance of Understanding, World Publishing Company
  (1961) The Red Peony, World Publishing Company
  (1962) The Pleasure of a Nonconformist, World Publishing Company
  (1963) Juniper Loa, World Publishing Company
  (1964) The Flight of Innocents, G. P. Putnam's Sons
  (1973) Chinese-English Dictionary of Modern Usage, Hong Kong Chinese University
  
  Works by Lin Tsuifeng ("Mrs. Lin Yutang") and their daughter Lin Hsiang Ju
  
  In English
  (1956) Cooking with the Chinese Flavor, Prentice Hall (co-written with Lin Hsiang Ju)
  (1960) Secrets of Chinese Cooking, Prentice Hall (co-written with Lin Hsiang Ju)
  (1972) Chinese Gastronomy, Pyramid Publications; 1977 reprint: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich (co-written with Lin Hsiang Ju, with an introduction by Dr. Lin Yutang)
  (1996) The Art of Chinese Cuisine, Tuttle (a retitled edition of 1972 Chinese Gastronomy, co-written with Lin Hsiang Ju, with an introduction by Dr. Lin Yutang)
  
  Works by his second daughter Lin Tai-Yi
  Biography of Lin Yutang
  Golden Platter Street
  The Queen and I
  Lin's Second Daughter
  How Do You Do?
    

Comments (0)