Wang Chang-hsiung entered
Nihon University in 1935 and published new poems like "Notes from a Narrow Lane" (陋巷札記) and the novella
Ripples of the Tamsui River (淡水河之漣漪) in the
Taiwan New People Newspaper (臺灣新民報) during his study in
Tokyo.
Ripples of the Tamsui River was his first fiction published in a newspaper. In 1942, he returned to
Taiwan and opened a dental clinic in Tamsui. Besides his profession, he continued writing and gained attention with the novella
A Raging Torrent in 1943. Due to political circumstances, Wang suspended his writing activities until around the 1960s. In 1958, he wrote the lyrics for the song "If We Open the Doors of Our Hearts" (阮若打開心內的門窗), composed by
Lu Chuan-sheng (呂泉生), becoming a representative work in the popular
Taiwanese music of that time. == Reception ==