found a cool book on libgen about Taiwan, so far so good 🧐

"If we imagine the whole history of the human habitation of Taiwan, up to the present day, as a single calendar year, then humans first arrive on 1 January — although those ancient people have left behind none of their DNA, only fire sticks and stone axes. The Neolithic period, which saw settlement of the island by the ancestors of today’s Formosan indigenous communities, begins around 1 November. The rise on the mainland of the First Emperor, Qin Shihuang, his Terracotta Army, and the very concept of there being a China that Taiwan could become a part of, happens sometime on 3 December. Prolonged and enduring ties with the Chinese on the mainland are initiated around Christmas. The Ming-dynasty loyalist Koxinga and his men arrive in the small hours of 28 December, and their regime is toppled with a Qing-dynasty retaliation by lunchtime. The Japanese annex Taiwan as a colony around midday on 30 December, and are themselves ousted shortly before dawn on New Year’s Eve, making way for the mass arrival of Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang (KMT), the Chinese Nationalist Party, in retreat from Mao’s Communists on the mainland. Martial law stays in force until just after breakfast, and the entire modern history of a democratic Republic of China on Taiwan occupies the next 18 hours until midnight,"

-- Jonathan Clements

Rebel Island: The incredible history of Taiwan (2024)

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i really like how this book breaks down how perspectives of historical events shift from era to era. a native's retribution for a deerskin trade gone awry can be told as a tragedy for a explorer seeking fortune in a new frontier.

makes the story of taiwan so much more interesting than the typical discussion on Taiwan's crazy neighbors drawing lines on maps for the sake of securing semi-conductor wafers

stumbled on this book by accident, and really glad i did.