Diamond Hill by Kit Fan - ISBN: 9780349701707
Hardcover
Hong Kong’s vanishing past: Secrets, survival, and finding peace.

Diamond Hill

Totally unputdownable and evocative literary fiction

$48.31

  • Hardcover

    352 pages

  • Release Date

    26 October 2021

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Summary

‘A rapid-fire debut with a cinematographer’s eye for detail… Fan strikes a deft balance between agile set-pieces and lingering beauty.’ Naoise Dolan

‘A vivid, powerful portrait of a vanishing world.’ David Nicholls

‘Do you know what it was like here? You wouldn’t believe the glamour. We had our own film studio, redbrick houses for the stars, even Jackie Chan. Now look at us - the Hollywood of the Orient will soon be gone altogether.’

1987, Hong Kong. Trying to outrun h…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780349701707
ISBN-10:0349701709
Author:Kit Fan
Publisher:John Murray Press
Imprint:Dialogue Books
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:352
Release Date:26 October 2021
Weight:460g
Dimensions:220mm x 146mm x 36mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Raw and authentic Hong Kong writing at its best. This book is exceptionally good

A rapid-fire debut with a cinematographer’s eye for detail, Diamond Hill interrogates fate, memory and redemption at a filmic velocity befitting its setting in Hong Kong’s former Hollywood. Fan strikes a deft balance between agile set-pieces and lingering beauty. – Naoise DolanA vivid, powerful portrait of a vanishing world – David NichollsThe best debut I’ve read in ages … The beauty and ugliness of life continually jostle as Buddha tries and often fails to do the right thing. There is a glorious luminosity to the writing and the reading experience is rather like looking into a kaleidoscope and giving it several twirls. I am very keen on swearing and especially enjoyed the vigorous and earthy cursing and the fascinating note at the end on Cantonese slang and profanities – Cathy RentzenbrinkImmediately engaging and dynamic and with an eye for an image that could only belong to a poet – Andrew McMillanRaw and authentic Hong Kong writing at its best. This book is exceptionally good – Chris ThrallGripping and highly accomplished … a thoroughly enjoyable and profound exploration of powerlessness, identity and the evolution of a city * Guardian *Kit Fan plunges us face-first into the pungently sordid world of Diamond Hill in his debut novel … Fan is an exuberant chronicler of a lost time and place, delightedly preserving Cantonese slang and profanities … it’s a timely consideration of Hong Kong’s recent past * The Times *Fan creates a textured, unsettled portrait of a territory facing a decisive ending. The ethical conflict lies in whether to exploit the inevitable destruction … or commit to small, doomed acts of salvation. The dark drama that unfolds is an elegy to that vanished vanishing world * Wall Street Journal *Diamond Hill breathes beauty. Through quiet prose that speaks eloquently for itself, Kit Fan skilfully weaves a story of loss and of being lost; a story of tragic mistakes, which haunts the reader long after the final page has been turned – Okechukwu Nzelu, author of The Private Joys of Nnenna MaloneyAn exhilarating and original tale, Diamond Hill marks award-winning Fan as a writer to watch * Cosmopolitan *Deeply evocative… Engaging, provocative, thoroughly compelling, Diamond Hill is written with the dexterity and lyricality of a poet, whose first novel leaves us excited for what may come next * Yorkshire Times *Kit Fan’s admirable debut novel Diamond Hill gives us the heart and soul of Hong Kong. Fan captures, with profound empathy, the temporary and precarious nature of the city. His motley crew-a former heroin addict, Buddhist nuns and prostitutes who have fallen from grace, a teenage gangster girl who runs a triad drug operation, among others-inhabit their Kowloon village before time destroys it … Despite disappearance and destiny, memory preserves the city’s past along with the Cantonese language in all its rich expressiveness and slang. We look forward to more from this author. – XU XI, author of Habit of a Foreign Sky, The Unwalled City, Dear Hong Kong, Insignificance: Hong Kong StoriesGleams with pleasurable insights… Memorable moments are sketched by a poet’s hand * South China Morning Post *Fan resurrects the neighbourhood as it would have looked in 1987, a decade before Britain’s handover of Hong Kong to China - a precarious maze of shacks and open gutters, shaken constantly by the rumblings of the planes flying close overhead from nearby Kai Tak Airport * The Straits Times *Fan deftly mixes the sacred with the profane, often on the same page. Just when you decide there’s no room for holiness amid the wreckage, you realize there may in fact be no other option * Kirkus Reviews *Fan’s evocative debut portrays a Hong Kong in transition… and brings poetic language and moving tributes to descriptions of the lost neighbourhood. The novel’s aching beauty makes an effective argument for remembering * Publishers Weekly *

About The Author

Kit Fan

Kit Fan is a novelist, poet and critic. He was born in Hong Kong and moved to the UK at the age of 21. His second poetry collection, As Slow As Possible was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and one of the Irish Times Books of the Year. He was shortlisted twice for the Guardian 4th Estate BAME Short Story Prize, and a winner of the Northern Writers Award, Times Stephen Spender Poetry Translation Prize, inaugural HKU International Poetry Prize and POETRY’s Editors Prize for Reviewing. Diamond Hill is his debut novel.

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