Jin Yong

Author details

Aliases:
Liang-Yung Cha, 林歡, Louis Cha Leung-yung, and 47 others 金庸, 庸 金, Chin-yung, Yong Jin, Jinyong, 김용, Цзинь Юн, 林欢, Liang-yung Cha, Jin Yong, Chin Yung, Yung Chin, Ťin Jung, Louis Cha, Luis Cha, Lương Tra, Kim Yong, Cha Liang-yung, ကျင်းယုံ, Yùhng Gam, Yung Kam, Leung-yung Cha, Kimyong, 查良鏞, Yaofulan, Жинь Юн, Kim-Dung, Liangyong Cha, ヨウ キン, Yō Kin, Linhuan, Yo Kin, 查良镛, 姚馥蘭, Liangyong Zha, 良镛 查, Louis Cha Leung Yung, Zha Liangyong, กิมย้ง, جین یونگ, 良鏞 查, Huan Lin, Цзінь Юн, Kim Dung, 金庸‏, Dung Kim, Kim-iûⁿ
Born:
Feb. 6, 1924
Died:
Oct. 30, 2018

External links

Louis Cha, GBM, OBE (simplified Chinese: 查良镛; traditional Chinese: 查良鏞; pinyin: Zhā Liángyōng), better known by his pen name Jin Yong (Chinese: 金庸; pinyin: Jīn Yōng; Cantonese Yale: Gām Yùhng), is a modern Chinese-language novelist. Co-founder of the Hong Kong daily Ming Pao, which he started in 1959, he was the paper's first editor-in-chief.

Cha's fiction, which is of the Wuxia ("martial arts and chivalry") genre, has a widespread following in Chinese-speaking areas, including Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, and the United States. His fifteen works written between 1955 and 1972 earned him a reputation as one of the finest Wuxia writers ever. He is currently the best-selling Chinese author alive; over 100 million copies of his works have been sold worldwide (not including unknown number of bootleg copies).

Cha's works have been translated into Korean, English, Japanese, French, Vietnamese, Indonesian, Burmese and Thai. He has many fans abroad as well, owing to the numerous adaptations of his works into films, television series, manhua (comics) and video games.[1][1]

[1]: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jin_Yong

Books by Jin Yong