In Yellow Mountain, Viscountess May Lin de Chezelles shares a biographical fiction of her grandfather’s migration from China to Malaya, based on her mother’s diaries. It creates an arresting portrayal of the pain endured by countless Chinese gentry, known as the Mandarins, who were forced to leave behind their ancestral, spiritual and cultural identities to reinvent themselves in new lands.
Her grandfather, Loke Wang-Lei, was a judge, military man and confidante to the imperial court in China. Loke took two years to plan their migration as it involved taking a large family and entourage of staff from Canton to Singapore and then north in the Malay peninsula where they eventually settled, in Taiping. On the boat out of China, Loke and his daughter, Susan Loke, forged a bond that strengthened…
