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  1. “Feng Chi-shun’s Diamond Hill is not just an autobiography of his childhood and adolescence. It is an insightful exposition of life in Hong Kong in the fifties and sixties. Historians and social scientists will find invaluable material in Diamond Hill for their study oftime

  2. 2023年7月19日 · Diamond Hill is the result. It’s a colourful memoir that is less about Feng than it is about the part of Hong Kong he grew up in, one whose name in Cantonese — Zyun3 Sek6 Saan1 (鑽石山), referring both to diamonds and ordinary quarrying — reflects the tension between glittering aspirations and rough reality.

  3. 2009年1月1日 · This memoir of a native son of a Kowloon-side squatter village – the first book ever on Diamond Hill, in either Chinese or English – presents the early days of a life shaped by a now-extinct community.

    • (80)
    • Paperback
    • Feng Chi-Shun
  4. 2009年1月1日 · 作者: Feng Chi-shun. 出版社: Blacksmith Books. 副标题: Memories of growing up in a Hong Kong squatter village. 出版年: 2009-1-1. 页数: 196. 定价: GBP 9.99. 装帧: Paperback. ISBN: 9789881774248. 豆瓣评分. 评价人数不足. 评价: 写笔记. 写书评. 加入购书单. 分享到. 推荐. 内容简介 · · · · · ·.

  5. Diamond Hill 電子書,作者 Feng Chi-shun - EPUB 書籍 | Rakuten Kobo 香港. 首頁. 電子書. 傳記與回憶錄. Diamond Hill. 在 傳記與回憶錄. Diamond Hill. Memories of Growing Up in a Hong Kong Squatter Village. 由 Feng Chi-shun. 簡介. Diamond Hill was one of the poorest and most backward of villages in Hong Kong when Hong Kong itself was poor and backward.

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  7. 2010年11月16日 · $1008 & FREE Shipping. Read sample. Diamond Hill: Memories of Growing Up in a Hong Kong Squatter Village Paperback – Illustrated, November 16, 2010. by Feng Chi-shun (Author) 39. See all formats and editions. "Diamond Hill was one of the poorest and most backward of villages in Hong Kong at a time when Hong Kong itself was poor and backward.

    • Feng Chi-shun
  8. 2015年11月9日 · The first book ever on Diamond Hill presents the early days of the author’s humble upbringing shaped by a now-extinct community, and an account of life in general in Hong Kong in the 60s. Although autobiographic, most of the events revolved around the author and did not necessarily involve him.