From Deseret News archives:
'Finding Iris Chang' is friend's take on troubled author
"I didn't want to touch it (the book) with a 10-foot pole," said Kamen during a phone interview from her home in Chicago, "but there were so many rumors flying around about her." She wanted to dispel rumors and write the real story of the colorful Chang "not a dry, clinical study, but one that would make both her and her bipolar disorder come alive."
Chang, the author of the international best seller "The Rape of Nanking," the compelling history of "the Chinese holocaust" the 1937 brutal torture and murder of upward of 35 million Chinese citizens at the hands of the Japanese, was instantly labeled a human rights pioneer. Today there is a bronze statue of Chang standing in Nanking.
She also wrote "The Thread of the Silkworm" and "The Chinese in America," but then she shocked the world in 2004 when, at the age of 36 a mother with a young son she took her own life.
Because Kamen was a close, personal friend of Chang's and didn't see the suicide coming, she became intensely interested in knowing why.
Yet Chang was also a "rival" of Kamen's and Kamen considered her rival's talents to be beyond her own. She considered Chang to be "the smartest person" she'd ever known "a superhuman invincible heroine."
Chang's son, Christopher (born with the help of a surrogate mother), has been diagnosed as autistic specifically Asperger's disorder, a mild form. Chang also experienced several miscarriages all said to influence the onset of bipolar disorder.
Kamen loved Chang, but she was determined not to "write a Hallmark card," either. She also loved the fact that Chang wanted to "write about the unsexy parts of history like genocide." Kamen found her research to be "very complicated" and pays special tribute to Chang's husband, Brett Douglas, who was "very generous and very open and it also helped him to move on."
Douglas told Kamen that Chang had "attention surplus disorder."
Douglas has since remarried to another Asian woman also named Iris Chang, who looks eerily like his first wife and they have a new son. (Iris is a commonly-used Americanized name for Asian women.)
Recent comments
This is absolutely fascinating. I would like to read more.
P Ledgewood | Nov. 23, 2007 at 1:11 p.m.
- 3A: Juan Diego runs away with win 9:59 p.m.
- 4A: Thunderbirds dynasty lives on 9:39 p.m.
- Utah Utes basketball at a glance 9:34 p.m.
- BYU basketball at a glance 9:33 p.m.
- Utes face stiff test in opener 9:30 p.m.
- Cougars ready for veteran opponent 9:22 p.m.
- Historically, Utes have owned TCU 9:20 p.m.
- Unga family is making its mark 9:18 p.m.
- Jazz not putting in effort 9:17 p.m.
- Selfishness to blame for Jazz woes? 9:15 p.m.
- House passes health care bill
335 - SLC council OKs gay rights policies
318 - TCU showdown has big implications
195 - Senators want food tax restored
158 - Cougars crush hapless Cowboys
155 - Editorial: Mormons and gay rights
139 - Will state consider gay rights law?
137 - Utah Jazz fall apart against Kings
131 - Letters: Strange breed in Utah
119 - TCU 4th in AP poll; U. 16th, Y. 22nd
119
A commenter on a previous blog entry asked about the forthcoming game...
Singer Thurl "Big T" Bailey, formerly of the Utah Jazz, will perform a...
Amen brother!
Working hard on defense: Lets see give up 7-9 3s per game score few...
"The worst is over" will become known as most famous of all "famous last words."
Not a single public employee ever decided on a single element of their pay...
Yes I believe a Judge will step in and do the right thing, One of them...
If we exclude the time Palin took to go speak to the financial sharpies in...
Not this year buddy. TCU will own the Utes.
Thurl i just saw you in person lol you went to my brothers school, Riverview...
Actually, ASU offered Collinsworth and wanted him very badly. So the score is...
It would be interesting to know how religiosity modifies the results if at...



