Zong Pu

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Zong Pu
Native name 宗璞
Born Feng Zhongpu (冯钟璞)
1928 (age 95–96)
Beijing, China
Occupation Novelist
Language Chinese
Alma mater Nankai University
Tsinghua University
Period 1948 - present
Genre Novel, prose
Notable works Note of Hiding in the East
Notable awards 6th Mao Dun Literature Prize
2001 Note of Hiding in the East
Relatives Father: Feng Youlan

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Zong Pu (Chinese: 宗璞; pinyin: Zōng Pú; Wade–Giles: Tsung P'u, born 26 July 1928), born Feng Zhongpu (冯钟璞), is a Chinese writer and scholar.[1] She won the Mao Dun Literature Prize for her 2001 novel, Note of Hiding in the East.[2]

Born in Beijing, Zong was the daughter of Feng Youlan, a prominent philosopher, and she grew up on various university campuses.[3] Zong graduated from Tsinghua University in 1951. She became a member of the Chinese Writers Association in 1962.

Works

  • Hong dou (Red Beans), 1957
  • Xian shang de meng (Dream on the Strings), 1978
  • 'Sanheng shi' (Everlasting Rock), 1980. Translated by Aimee Lykes as The Everlasting Rock, 1998. ISBN 978-0894107825.
  • shu shui (Who am I), 1979
  • (A Head in the Marshes), 1985
  • Nan du ji (Heading South), 1988
  • Dong cang ji (Hiding in the East), 2001

References

  1. Zong Pu, retrieved October 16, 2012
  2. Laureate Writers Awarded, China.org.cn, July 27, 2005, retrieved April 29, 2011.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.


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