Shadow of light.
Following the first episode of "You lighted up my life" in 2017, the author Shih Yousi uses a touching love story to outline the distortion of the tragedy of the times. "Shadow of Light" to look directly at the hearts of the offenders of White Terror and analyze them with his gentle pen. The fragility of human nature opens a profound dialogue between the descendants of the victims and the perpetrators.
Introduction
When someone was complacent about monitoring his classmates to earn bonuses, Yang Yi, a grandson of a retired spy during the White Terror period, faced Taiwanese society with a redemptive mentality, facing his favorite grandfather, his unspeakable secret in the past. It is an original sin that Yang Yi can hardly get rid of in her life. As a theater stage designer, Chang Wenwen always paints a mutilated human body. Her father used to be a military doctor of a police chief during martial law. When his father died of hatred, no one knew what he was doing in that hell where ghosts and gods were not close. This regret forced Chang Wenwen to a dead end. Fortunately, drama therapist Aaron Chou save. Li Shao-chi remembered his military father's deeds to her. Don't talk to others, and go home quickly after school. No one outside can believe it... But his father was massacred in Keelung Port in March 1947. Taiwanese people? Questions that could not be answered left a mark on Li Shao-chi, who was over 60 years old. How will the victims face the offspring of the offenders? How does Yang Yi, who wants to redeem his sins, meet the blow of the truth? When he thought it would be difficult to look directly at himself anymore, Aaron Chou told him that this road of suffering would end. But where is the end? How to repay the tragedy of the times?
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施又熙
The writer is majoring in psychology, social work, and sociology. In the past, his published works were mainly novels, essays, stage plays, and biographical literature. She wrote themes such as criminal psychology, state violence, trauma healing, parent-child psychology, and social justice.
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