Early life Gong Baiyu was born Gong Wanxuan (万选) in
Qing County,
Hebei Province, during the final years of the
Qing dynasty. His father was a battalion commander (管带) in the
New Armies. He attended school in Tianjin and began to write stories in his teen years. Starting in July 1921, he maintained correspondence with the highly influential novelist and translator Lu Xun, who regularly lent him books, including works of European literature he had translated into Chinese. It wasn't until 1938 that he finally adopted Baiyu as his pen name for the martial arts stories, a genre that was not viewed as being quite so respectable and had faced occasional sanctions by the government.
Career His first martial arts novel,
Twelve Money Darts (十二金钱镖), was published serially in the newspaper
Yong Bao (庸报) from February 1938, eventually being released in book form in four volumes. Set in the years around the time of the fall of the
Ming dynasty and the rise of the Qing, it was his most highly praised story and served as the first volume of a trilogy and was followed by 血涤寒光剑, from 1941, and 毒砂掌 in 1947. 武林争雄记 began its serialized run in the final month of 1939, which was followed up in 1942 with 牧野雄风. 偷拳 is considered his most important work. A 20 chapter edition was published in Tianjin in 1940, and then reissued with 22 chapters in 1947 in
Shanghai. It deals with the life of the founder of
Yang style taiji,
Yang Luchan.
Later Years and Influence Following the Communist victory in the
Chinese Civil War in 1949, the wuxia genre in which Gong Baiyu made his name was banned in the Mainland. Authors in Hong Kong and Taiwan carried on the tradition and claimed to find influence in his legacy. Liang Yusheng, one of the three major novelists in the martial arts literature of the post-1949 generation, chose the
yu (羽) in his
nom de plume in homage to Gong Baiyu. In his final years, he suffered from emphysema. A blood clot in his brain slowed down his research into historical Chinese writing (
oracle bone and
Chinese bronze inscriptions), which by the 1950s filled up much of his time. His hopes to publish his collected writings on this topic before his death were not to be realized. Gong Baiyu died in 1966. In 2002, two of his children, Gong Yiren and Gong Zhiyu, won a lawsuit against popular folk artist and raconteur
Shan Tianfang for copyright infringement over his use of the plot of the 1938 novel 十二金钱镖 in a radio story broadcast. == References ==