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Description
Child of the SunHistorian Lonn Taylor built a career as a curator in history museums, including the Smithsonian Institution. In retirement he wrote weekly columns on the people and places of Texas, signed the "Rambling Boy," that were distributed widely in print and on the radio. This book stands out from his numerous other books on historical and literary topics: it's the only one he wrote about himself and the last book he wrote before he died in June 2019. It
Historian Lonn Taylor built a career as a curator in history museums, including the Smithsonian Institution. In retirement he wrote weekly columns on the people and places of Texas, signed the "Rambling Boy," that were distributed widely in print and on the radio. This book stands out from his numerous other books on historical and literary topics: it's the only one he wrote about himself and the last book he wrote before he died in June 2019. It describes how his experience of growing up in the Philippines from 1947 to 1955 shaped his entire life by teaching him the destructive power of war. In the Philippines, his father was employed as a civil engineer building and rebuilding roads and bridges in the war-devastated islands. "I lived most of my daily life in a well-protected bubble of white colonialism," he says in this memoir of his youth, "and thought nothing about it." Despite that "well-protected bubble," Taylor was aware of the ruins all around him, the ravages of bombs and artillery shells, and of his Filipino neighbors unbowed by their loss of wealth and privilege, or their confinement and starvation in Japanese internment camps. The manifest strengths and resilience of a society blended of Malay, Chinese, Spanish, and American cultures made him a lifelong believer in the benefits of multiculturalism--even as he bore witness to the islands' postcolonial woes: a feudal agricultural system maintained by landlords with private armies, corruption so endemic that even post office clerks expected tips for selling stamps, and deadly outbreaks of personal violence. As an American child in the Philippines, and then, inevitably, an outsider in the postwar America he returned to at fifteen, Taylor honed a keen and varied sense of difference in class, culture, and language. This nuanced understanding can be heard throughout Child of the Sun as Taylor reflects on his innocent years, conveying with hard-earned worldliness and wisdom all the beauty and lasting conflict of a lost world and time.Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Published: 09/24/2020
ISBN: 9780806167121
Pages: 240
Weight: 0.79lbs
Size: 9.02h x 5.98w x 0.55d
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4.5 ★★★★★
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Product Reviews
★★★★★ 4
Easy to put together
Size: 16 x 18 Inch
Great legs and look great with the table, however, the legs connect to a peak and is not level. A friend made me some spacers on his 3d printer so I could use them.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2025
★★★★★ 5
Easy to put together and sturdy.
Size: 16 x 18 Inch
Perfect base for my diy coffee table. Easy to use and exactly what I needed
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Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2026
★★★★★ 3
It high quality but usable.
Size: 16 x 18 Inch, Size: 16 x 18 Inch
Kind of poor quality. The 4 way connectors do not set level to each other and the 3/16” Allen screws strip out very easily. I wouldn’t buy again.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2026
★★★★★ 5
Metal table legs
Size: 28 x 24 Inch
Table legs are very sturdy for our two inch thick, round cut, epoxy slab. Great accent table.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2026
★★★★★ 5
Superb
Size: 16 x 18 Inch
They were very struggling, made it easy to put together.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2026
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