At the time of Burma's military coup in 1962,
Wendy Law-Yone was fifteen. A year later, her father Ed
Law-Yone, daredevil proprietor of The Nation
newspaper, was arrested and his newspaper shut down.
Eventually, Wendy was herself briefly imprisoned
before managing to escape the country. Ed would
spend five years as a political prisoner. But from the
moment he was freed he set about forming a
government-in-exile in neighbouring Thailand. There he
tried, unsuccessfully, to stage a revolution. Yet even
after emigrating to America, he never gave up hope for
the restoration of democracy in Burma. He died
disappointed - but not before placing in his daughter's
hands an extraordinary bequest. Ed had asked Wendy
for help in editing his papers, but year after year she
avoided the daunting task. When at last she found the
confidence to take up the neglected manuscript, she
discovered a captivating saga. Here was the forceful
testimony of an ambitious, audacious, idiosyncratic and
above all determined patriot whose career had
spanned Burma under colonial rule, under Japanese
occupation, through the turbulence of the post-war
years, and into the catastrophe of a military
dictatorship. The result of this discovery is
Golden Parasol: a unique portrait of Burma, a
nation whose vicissitudes continue to intrigue the
world. It is also a powerfully evocative family memoir:
a daughter's journey of reconciliation that illuminates
the twin histories of country and kin.
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