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Egg Woman's Daughter
a Tanka memoir
 
Mary Chan Ma-lai

ISBN: 962-7160-53-9
Dimensions: 272 pp, 200 x 140 mm
Price: HK$138/US$18

"Mary tells her own story in the wonderful Egg Woman's Daughter, revealing all her humour, optimism and love of life."

Young Post, South China Morning Post

"Mary Chan showed that almost anything is possible with determination and perseverance."

The Sunday Examiner (Catholic), Hong Kong

 
With brutal honestly and wry humour, Mary Chan Ma-lai tells the story of herself and her family against the backdrop of a brash and rising Hong Kong. A testament to her victory over her disabilities to become a teacher, writer, world traveller and vital member of society, this is an important book about Hong Kong as it seldom reveals itself by an articulate and inspiring author whose blind eyes saw deeply.

One of the finest memoirs ever written by a Hong Hong writer, a pre-publication excerpt of this book was featured among the best of contemporary Hong Kong writing in the summer 1998 edition of Manoa, the literary journal of the University of Hawaii.

Critics Comments

"This is the story of a woman who rose above disabilities, poverty and disaster by sheer force of will and deep religious faith."

South China Morning Post

"The book should encourage many who are handicapped to be optimistic about fulfilling their dreams. Mary Chan showed that almost anything is possible with determination and perseverance."

The Sunday Examiner (Catholic), Hong Kong

"Adversity is like a mountain. Sometimes it looms in front of you, offering you two choices. The easy option is to accept it and adapt to the constraints and problems it may cause. Or you can see it as a challenge, and rise to the occasion.

"Mary Chan Ma-lai chose the latter. She used courage and bravery to overcome her own adversity and her story is an inspiration to all who come across it.

"The true story of Mary was that she was born in 1950 to a poor Tanka family who lived in terrible conditions. They had nothing apart from the ramshackle fishing junk they called home. Mary lived on the dilapidated vessel with her parents and all her extended family Her grandparents ruled the roost, and various uncles, aunts and cousins came to live with them at different times, making life crowded and difficult.

"Leung Ho, Mary's mother, worked hard, cleaning, cooking meals and generally looking after the family's needs. She never questioned her position, and instead got on with her difficult life as best she could.

"Mary's father earned a little money from fishing and trading, but preferred to gamble away his earnings rather than provide for his family. He gradually became an opium addict, causing more problems for the family.

"Mary was feeble as a baby. She crawled around the boat like an abandoned animal, but resolutely hung on to life, even when things were desperate.

"When she was two years old, she developed cataracts. The family had no money to send her to a doctor, so her grandmother decided to treat her with a traditional remedy.

"She mixed hot incense ash with mud and spread the paste on Mary's eyes. The result was devastating. Mary was left blind in one eye, and could only see the movement of distant shadows with the other.

"Could Mary's pathetic life get any worse?

"At the age of five, the inevitable happened. A trap-door in the floor had been left open, and Mary fell into the hold, crushing her spine. She was left paralysed from the waist down, with a crooked hunchback.

"With no money to seek medical help, Mary's future as a blind cripple seemed even more bleak. But her mother refused to give in to the family suggestions that her little “blind ghost” be taken somewhere dark and left to die. Mary was a fighter, and her mother wanted to give her every chance she could to survive.

"At last, fate held out a helping hand. Father Edward Collins, a young Catholic priest from Ireland, discovered her on the family junk in Aberdeen harbour, and resolved to help.

"This was the beginning of a formidable friendship that was to last until Mary's death in September 2000.

"Father Collins arranged medical treatment for Mary, and stayed by her side at the hospital. She became a pupil at Honeyville Convent Primary School for blind children in 1959, and eight years later, was one of the few blind students to gain a place at St Francis' Canossian School, one of Hong Kong's most prestigious grammar schools.

"Mary tells her own story in the wonderful Egg Woman's Daughter, revealing all her humour, optimism and love of life.

"Despite her disabilities, Mary never felt sorry for herself. She met astonishing people and experienced amazing things in her life, and these somehow cancelled out the misery and hopelessness that could so easily have driven her life."

John Millen
Young Post
South China Morning Post

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