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Hong Kong writers
Hong Kong writers 17 L, 117 T
  • Elegies
    Elegies 2023 Movie
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    Director: Ann Hui
    Producer: Ken Hui
    Ann Hui's personal encounters with some of Hong Kong's most notable poets, showing the topography of contemporary poetry on and of the city. more »
    rank #1 ·
    Elegies (Chinese: 詩) is a 2023 Hong Kong documentary film directed by Ann Hui. Produced by PicaPica Media and distributed by Golden Scene [zh], the film features interviews with various Hong Kong poets, most notably Huang Canran [zh] and Liu Wai-tong [zh], along with footage of the late Xi Xi and Leung Ping-kwan. The film dissects the daily lives of Hong Kong poets and examines their views on poetry, exploring the decline of Hong Kong's poetry culture.
  • The Train to Lo Wu
    The Train to Lo Wu book by Jess Row
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    rank #2 ·
    The Train to Lo Wu is a collection of short stories by Jess Row published in January 2005. The book contains seven loosely related stories set in or related to Hong Kong. They all deal with the tension felt between insiders and outsiders, especially between locals and foreigners visiting for study or work.
  • The Back Door (fiction) fiction by The China Mail
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    rank #3 ·
    The Back Door was an anonymous work of invasion literature serialised in Hong Kong newspaper The China Mail from 30 September through 8 October 1897. The work, written in the form of a historical account, describes an imagined Russian and French landing at Hong Kong's Deep Water Bay, followed by shelling of Victoria Peak, a sea battle in the Sulphur Channel between Hong Kong Island and Green Island, and a last stand at Stonecutters Island in which British forces were decisively defeated. The story was intended as a criticism of the lack of British funding for the defence of Hong Kong; fears of invasion were driven by French expansionism in Southeast Asia and increasing Russian influence in Manchuria. It was speculated, but never proven, that members of the Imperial Japanese Army read the book in preparation for the 1941 Battle of Hong Kong, in which Japanese forces overran Hong Kong (via the New Territories, rather than Hong Kong Island) in just 18 days. In terms of its style, it follows the model laid out by George Tomkyns Chesney's The Battle of Dorking, but is noteworthy for its attention to detail, even giving real names of individual soldiers and ships; one reviewer described it as "unique" in its verisimilitude, stating that only William Le Queux's The Invasion of 1910 and Cleveland Moffett's The Conquest of America could compare to it.
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    rank #4 ·
    The Hong Kong International Literary Festival is an international literary festival held annually in Hong Kong. It was founded in 2000 by Nury Vittachi and creative writing teacher Jane Camens, with support from Malaysian poet Shirley Geok-lin Lim. The first festival was held in 2001. The 19th Annual Hong Kong International Literary Festival was held between 1 November and 10 November 2019. In 2023, the Hong Kong International Literary Festival combined with the Young Readers Festival and held a streamlined festival in March, featuring both adult, youth and young reader literature. The 2024 Hong Kong Literary and Young Reader's Festival will take place from 4-10 March 2024.
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