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Iris Chang, ‘The Rape of Nanking’ Author, Found Dead

‘The Rape of Nanking’ author is found dead (Mercury News)

Iris Chang, the bestselling Bay Area author whose book on Japanese atrocities in China during World War II catapulted her to fame and prominence, was found dead from an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound. She was 36. Chang drove down a road south of Los Gatos and shot herself in her car, authorities said.

Santa Clara County sheriff’s Deputy Terrance Helm said a motorist driving Tuesday morning on Highway 17 south of the Cats restaurant in an unincorporated area near Los Gatos noticed a car a short distance down a private water district road. He pulled over to check on the vehicle and called 911. Investigators found a frontier-type six-gun and a note in the car, according to sources with knowledge of the case. The official cause of death was pending.

Chang suffered a breakdown and was hospitalized during a recent trip researching her fourth book about U.S. soldiers who fought the Japanese in the Philippines during World War II, her former editor and agent Susan Rabiner told the Associated Press. Chang continued to suffer from depression after she was released from the hospital. In a note to her family, she asked to be remembered as the person she was before she became ill — “engaged with life, committed to her causes, her writing and her family,” Rabiner said.

Sad and bizarre.

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia with his wife and infant daughter.

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Comments
 

Sad... I've read 'The Rape of Nanking' -- I wonder if all the research she's done is what made her ill.

Posted by Jade | November 12, 2004 | 09:57 am | Permalink
 

Wow. Very troubling. I remember seeing her on Hardball once, when the Nanking book came out. Sad.

Posted by Johnny Walker Red | November 12, 2004 | 10:27 am | Permalink
 

What? You use the word "rape" in the title and then don't place within your post the obligatory message: "Authorities say there was no evidence of sexual assualt."

OK, now the above comment was "inane" and "snarky." I don't necessarily guarantee "good" or even "worthwhile."

Posted by Tig | November 12, 2004 | 01:29 pm | Permalink
 

This is terrible. That book is sitting in my house (on my husband's bookcase, of course). I haven't been able to bring myself to read it, much less research/write that and three other books that were surely just as tough.

If nothing else, she performed a vital service to history. As with the Holocaust, this is something the world needs to know about.

She was a brave woman: I assume she was eventually overwhelmed by the tragic quality of her subject matter.

Posted by Attila Girl | November 12, 2004 | 03:04 pm | Permalink
 

The only one of Iris Chang's work I read is "Thread of the Silkworm" due to my interest in Qian Xuesen, the father of China's missile program. Fascinating story and still the best work on this subject in the wwest. I can't bring myself to read "Rape" because of the subject (just as I couldn't force myself to get throught the holocaust chapter of the Rise and Fall of the Third Reich).

Posted by DC Loser | November 12, 2004 | 05:43 pm | Permalink
 

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