Shropshire Star

Best-selling martial arts novelist Louis Cha dies

Mr Cha’s novels about ancient Chinese swordsmen have sold millions and are among the most widely read in the Chinese-speaking world.

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Louis Cha

Best-selling Chinese martial arts novelist and Hong Kong journalist Louis Cha has died after a long illness aged 94.

The Hong Kong newspaper founded by Mr Cha, Ming Pao Daily News, said he passed away on Tuesday at a Hong Kong hospital.

Mr Cha’s novels about ancient Chinese swordsmen have sold millions and are among the most widely read in the Chinese-speaking world.

A poster with pictures featuring characters from the novels of Louis Cha
A poster with pictures featuring characters from the novels of Louis Cha (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

They inspired film adaptations, TV and radio dramas, comic books and videogames, and greatly influenced Hong Kong popular culture.

They include The Heaven Sword And The Dragon Saber, about a kindhearted hero who is indecisive but uses his kung fu skills to unify a divided gang and is elected its leader, and The Eagle-Shooting Heroes, about a tragic hero who sacrifices his life in guarding the country against invading Mongolians.

Mr Cha was born in 1924 in Hangzhou in mainland China and graduated from the Law School of Suzhou in 1948, the South China Morning Post said.

He had planned to become a diplomat, but began work as a journalist in 1947 to support his studies. The communist revolution in 1949 closed off his opportunities to enter diplomacy.

Mr Cha’s first novel, The Book And The Sword, was published in 1955 and became an instant hit. He went on to write 14 martial arts novels, often under the pen name Jin Yong.

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