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Qin Mu, a writer commemorative of the Provincial Tute Exhibition, was the deputy editor-in-chief of Yangcheng Evening News

author:Golden Sheep Net
Qin Mu, a writer commemorative of the Provincial Tute Exhibition, was the deputy editor-in-chief of Yangcheng Evening News

Qin Mu wrote in a fen pen Yangcheng Evening News reporter Zheng Xun remade

Qin Mu, a writer commemorative of the Provincial Tute Exhibition, was the deputy editor-in-chief of Yangcheng Evening News

Qin Mu and Zi Feng and his wife (taken in Conghua Hot Spring in 1962) Yangcheng Evening News reporter Zheng Xun remade

Qin Mu, a writer commemorative of the Provincial Tute Exhibition, was the deputy editor-in-chief of Yangcheng Evening News

Footprints of Dream Seekers Commemorative Writer Qin Mu Exhibition Provincial Map Launch 1 Qin Mu Relics Yangcheng Evening News reporter Zheng Xun photographed

He is in charge of two supplements, "Flower Land" and "Evening Party"

Yangcheng Evening News Reporter Huang Zhouhui and correspondent Xin Xiuqin reported: From July 3 to September 30, the Guangdong Provincial Zhongshan Library held the exhibition "Footprints of Dream Seekers - Commemorating Writer Qin Mu", mainly exhibiting some of his manuscripts, writings, books and other related archival materials, so that readers can more fully understand his writing career and appreciate and inherit the precious literary heritage he left behind.

Qin Mu (1919-1992) was a well-known contemporary Chinese writer whose original name was Lin Paiguang and whose scientific name was Lin Juefu, and Qin Mu was his pen name in the late 1930s. Born in Chenghai, Guangdong Province, he was born in Hong Kong, and returned from Singapore with his father as a teenager; he served as the director of the Editorial Office of the Zhonghua Bookstore in Guangzhou, the vice chairman of the Guangdong Branch of the China Writers Association, the editor-in-chief of Works Magazine, the deputy editor-in-chief of Yangcheng Evening News, and the director of the department of Chinese of Jinan University. Qin Mu has a good relationship with the Yangcheng Evening News. In 1959, at the age of 40, Qin Mu served as the deputy editor-in-chief of Yangcheng Evening News, in charge of two supplements, "Flower Land" and "Evening Party". In 1962, he began to write a novel, "The Sea of Rage", which was serialized in the Yangcheng Evening News. At the beginning of the Cultural Revolution in 1966, he was attacked and criticized, and was sent to Yingde County in northern Guangdong for labor reform, and was forced to put aside his pen. At that time, several newspapers in Guangdong published critical articles against him, and he became the first "counter-revolutionary" in Guangdong's literary and art circles to be named and criticized.

Since the 1940s, Qin Mu has entered the literary world as an essayist, and for the next half century, he has dabbled in prose, novels, drama, children's literature, poetry, literary theory, and popular science works. He is particularly known for his prose, and he has been hailed as one of the "Three Great Masters of Contemporary Chinese Prose". His works have also been widely compiled into various anthologies and anthologies, and so far more than 50 have been selected as textbooks or teaching aids for universities, primary and secondary schools, and some of his best works have also been selected as Chinese textbooks in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Singapore and other places.

In 2012, Qin Mu's relatives Zeng Rihua and Lü Shuqing, on behalf of the family, donated more than 7,000 volumes (pieces) of his writings and main collections of books and manuscripts during his lifetime, as well as a batch of objects, to the Guangdong Provincial Zhongshan Library. The latter set up a small book house for the Qin Mu Memorial in the museum to commemorate it.

Edit: Ivy

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