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Diamond Hill - by Kit Fan (Paperback)

Diamond Hill - by  Kit Fan (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 16.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>In Hong Kong, leading up to the fraught handover from British to Chinese rule, a recovering heroin addict returns to Hong Kong's last shanty town and tries to salvage what's left of a place he hoped to forget.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>It is 1987 and three years since Britain signed the Joint Declaration agreeing to hand over its last colony, Hong Kong, to China in 1997. With that declaration comes the promise that the city will remain unchanged for fifty years. But upheaval is already happening in Diamond Hill. Once the 'Hollywood of the Orient, ' it is now a shanty town and an eyesore right in the middle of a glitzy financial hub. Buddha, a recovering heroin addict, returns home to find the shabby neighborhood being bulldozed to make room for gleaming towers. Buddhist nuns, drug gangs, property developers, the government and foreign powers each have itchy palms, and all want a piece of Diamond Hill. Kit Fan's hard-hitting and exhilarating debut is a requiem for a disappearing city, as well as a meditation on powerlessness, religion, memory, and displacement.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><b>Praise for Diamond Hill</b></p><p>"Fan's evocative debut portrays a Hong Kong in transition...Fan brings poetic language and moving tributes to descriptions of the lost neighborhood...the novel's aching beauty makes an effective argument for remembering." <b>--<i>Publishers Weekly</i></b></p><p>''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.'' <b>--<i>Kirkus Reviews</i></b></p><p>"Raw and authentic Hong Kong. Writing at its best. This book is exceptionally good." <b>--CHRIS THRALL, bestselling author of <i>Eating Smoke</i></b></p><p>"I enjoyed <i>Diamond Hill</i> very much. It's fantastically evocative of a time and place, full of vivid images but never at the expense of story. A hugely impressive first novel."<b>--DAVID NICHOLLS, bestselling author of <i>One Day</i> and <i>Us</i></b></p><p>"An extraordinary book. I can't remember reading something so terrifying, amazing, moving, and complicatedly fascinating. The characters brand themselves immediately and we know them completely and not at all. The interweaving of the political and the private is startling. It makes such a complete world and shows you how precarious complete worlds are."<b>--ADAM PHILLIPS, author of <i>Attention Seeking</i> and <i>Becoming Freud</i></b></p><p><b>Praise for As Slow As Possible</b></p><p>"Utterly straightforward and lucid, with an oblique dream-like undertow, Fan's remarkable poems--that seem wholly original, even in their echoes of the various traditions that inform them--intrigue us with their haunting and haunted observations and atmospheres. The assurance of the voice in <i>As Slow As Possible</i> is often startling, partly because of the precision of its vulnerability, and partly because Fan seems to sense something in the language that gives his poems an uncanny momentum and coherence. There is wisdom encoded in these poems that is at once fleeting and revelatory. It is an extraordinary book."<b>--ADAM PHILLIPS, author of <i>Attention Seeking</i> and <i>Becoming Freud</i></b></p><p>"If there is something of Marianne Moore's eccentric edginess in the formal accomplishment of these poems, there is also an elegant surrealism wholly Kit Fan's own. His is an intensely visual imagination, generous and capacious of eye, but joining its manifold optical stimuli to a corresponding tenderness and complexity of emotional response. 'How should we unimagine a thing once it's been imagined?' asks one poem, and the collection as a whole concerns itself with reversals, metaphysical shifts in gear permitting us a glimpse of origins, of possibilities as yet untouched by the immutable laws of cause and effect. Fan's is in this sense a recuperative vision, at the same time too fiercely intelligent to be anything other than disabused. The resulting poems hum with intellectual tension like high-voltage wires. <i>As Slow as Possible </i> deserves to be read in the way its title suggests: this is a collection that will lavishly reward careful and attentive reading."<b>--CAITRÍONA O'REILLY</b></p><p>"<i>As Slow As Possible</i>, Kit Fan's second collection and a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, flies through eras and cultures."<b>--CLAIRE CROWTHER</b></p><p>"Encourages us to appreciate the minutiae of our lives."<b>--<i>Times Literary Supplement</i></b></p><p>"<i>As Slow As Possible</i> accepts that our lives are circumscribed little pockets, or 'spots, ' of time and the task of the poet is to try and slow us down and notice the magic in the everyday that we take for granted, or are too busy to take in."<b>--<i>The Poetry Review</i></b></p><p><b>Praise for Paper Scissors Stone</b></p>"'Then all things began twice.' The poems in <i>Paper Scissors Stone</i> are moved by the forces of repetition and release, and are haunted by crossings (of borders, of people, of languages and their written characters). With wit and sorrow, precision and tact, the poems study the essential qualities of places, persons, and their arrangements, asking us what it is to begin twice. The book is a formally beautiful and complete meditation on transformation."<b>--SASKIA HAMILTON</b></p><p>"These extraordinary poems, so assured in their directions, so startling in their clarities, have an eerily dream-like wakefulness. Fan's enigmatic lucidity is born of a confluence of traditions, both real and imagined. This is not simply a remarkable debut, but a brilliantly accomplished book."<b>--ADAM PHILLIPS, author of <i>Attention Seeking</i> and <i>Becoming Freud</i></b></p><p>"Here is a collection of complex work, skillfully executed. The poems, each carefully measured and crafted, when taken together add up to a beautifully articulated body of work. This is the performance of a fully-fledged poet."<b>--LOUISE HO</b></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Kit Fan was born in Hong Kong and moved to the UK at the age of twenty-one. In 2017 and 2018 he was shortlisted for the Guardian 4th Estate BAME Short Story Prize for "Duty Free" and "City of Culture." He studied at the Chinese University of Hong Kong before completing a PhD on Thom Gunn at the University of York. Also a poet, his second book of poems, <i>As Slow As Possible</i>, was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation for Autumn 2018, one of the Guardian's 50 biggest books in Autumn 2018, and the Irish Times Best Poetry Book of the Year. He was invited by the Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon to be a visiting scholar in 2020. In 2018 he won a Northern Writers' Award for for his first novel, <i>Diamond Hill</i>. He lives and works in York.

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