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Chan, Ho-Kei

WORK TITLE: The Borrowed
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S): Chan, Ho-Kei
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE:
CITY:
STATE:
COUNTRY:
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Chan is family name * http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15236323.Chan_Ho_Kei * http://www.groveatlantic.com/?title=The+Borrowed * http://asianreviewofbooks.com/content/the-borrowed-by-chan-ho-kei/

RESEARCHER NOTES:

Title: Mr.

Email: N/A

LC control no.: no2017016470
LCCN Permalink: https://lccn.loc.gov/no2017016470
HEADING: Chan, Ho-Kei, 1975-
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100 1_ |a Chan, Ho-Kei, |d 1975-
372 __ |a Detective and mystery fiction |2 lcgft
374 __ |a Authors |2 lcsh
375 __ |a Men |2 lcsh
377 __ |a chi
400 1_ |a 陳浩基, |d 1975-
400 1_ |a Chen, Haoji, |d 1975-
667 __ |a Non-Latin script reference not evaluated
670 __ |a Chan, Ho-Kei. The brrowed, 2017 : |b t.p. (Chan Ho-Kei)
670 __ |a DNB via VIAF Feb. 7, 2017 |b (Chan, Ho-Kei, 1975-)
670 __ |a OCLC Feb. 7, 2017 |b (Chan, Ho-Kei = 陳浩基 = Chen, Haoji)

 

PERSONAL

Born 1975, in Hong Kong, China.

ADDRESS

  • Agent - Markus Hoffmann, Regal Hoffmann and Associates, 242 W. 38th St., New York, NY 10001.

CAREER

Writer, 2008–. Also worked as a software engineer, game designer, scriptwriter, and editor of comic magazines.

AWARDS:

Mystery Writers of Taiwan Award, 2009, for The Locked Room of Bluebeard; Soji Shimada Award, 2011, for The Man Who Sold the World; Taipei Book Fair Award, 2015, for 13.67.

 

WRITINGS

  • 13.67 (six novellas; in Chinese), 2015 , published as translation by Jeremy Tiang published as The BorrowedThe Borrowed Black Cat (New York, NY), 2017

Author of the Chinese-language novels The Locked Room of Bluebeard and The Man Who Sold the World. Work represented in anthologies, including S.T.E.P., Crown (Taiwan), 2015. Author of short stories.

SIDELIGHTS

Chan Ho-Kei was born in 1975 in Hong Kong, when it was still a dependent territory of the United Kingdom. He grew up there, a witness to the turbulent years that preceded the British handover of the territory to the People’s Republic of China in 1997, and to the metamorphosis of the technically autonomous region thereafter. Chan worked as a software engineer and game designer. He became an editor of manga comics and a scriptwriter, but by the year 2008 he was gaining attention as an award-winning author of crime fiction.

In 2011 Chan received the Soji Shimada Award for the Chinese-language work The Man Who Sold the World. It is the story of a man who may or may not be homicide detective Xu Youyi–or may be Yan Zhicheng, the actual murder suspect himself. Even Xu/Yan does not know the answer; his memory of the six years since the murder is a confusing fog of images that he is desperate to penetrate. The novel was optioned for foreign production, primarily throughout Asia.

Chan’s next novel, 13.67, would introduce him to a Western readership in the English translation, The Borrowed. “The book is greater than the sum of its parts,” announced the description at the Books from Taiwan website. That is because The Borrowed is not only a crime novel presented in an unusual, reverse-order structure, but it also highlights critical events in the history of the city. Furthermore, the perspective is not that of the typical English-speaking expatriate sleuth, as Melanie Ho reported in the Asian Review of Books: it reflects “a truly local point of view.”

The Borrowed covers nearly five decades in the career of legendary Hong Kong police investigator Kwan Chun-dok–in the form of six standalone novellas that begin in 2013, when Kwan is on his deathbed. A high-profile billionaire has been murdered, and Inspector Sonny Lok knows that his former mentor is the only detective who can solve the murder in time to avert disaster. He does not know that threads from the fabric of this case stretch back to the very beginning of Kwan’s illustrious career.

Each novella sets one of Kwan’s most momentous cases in an important period of Hong Kong history, a history in which the Hong Kong police force has always played a significant role, for better or worse. In the year 2003 the city was paralyzed with fear of the lethal respiratory disease known as SARS, and the police were hard-pressed to enforce quarantines and maintain public order. In 1997 the sovereignty of Hong Kong was transferred from British control to Chinese authority. Financial crises and the H5 avian flu epidemic threatened a city already under stress from the uncertainty of a future under Communist rule. Before that, the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations and subsequent massacre in Beijing caused social unrest that was felt as far away as Hong Kong. In 1977 it was local scandals unearthed by the governor’s Independent Commission against Corruption that triggered a massive shakeup in Kwan’s own department. The novel ends ten years earlier when leftist riots and bomb threats against British colonial rule in 1967 left thousands of rioters in jail and more than fifty people dead. The intrepid Kwan makes his way through all of it, unearthing clues that no one else can see, making mistakes along the way and learning from them, and inspiring a young protégé to follow in his mentor’s footsteps.

Critics found much to admire in Chan’s combination of history lesson and crime novel. The novellas collectively explore themes of “love, honour, race, class, jealousy and revenge,” observed a reviewer at the Crime Fiction Lover website. As an example of what Chan dubs social history, Amy Ng commented in Asian Ave, “the historical and cultural nuance in this novel gives a unique twist on a classic detective story, … and nothing is ever as it seems.” Multiple reviewers learned that, in Hong Kong, some things never change. Kwan’s last case completes a circle that began in 1967, only to be revealed in the very last line of the very last page.

According to a Kirkus Reviews commentator, “Chan’s strong suit is procedural plotting,” at which he “displays a formidable mastery.” Christine Tran reported in Booklist that The Borrowed “is a strong collection … driven by flawless deductive reasoning and thoughtful character development.” “The puzzles are all brain teasers,” wrote a reviewer at Literary Treats, and “the stories are all compelling and character-driven.” She enjoyed becoming acquainted with Kwan in reverse, “as he is revealed to be increasingly more vulnerable.” She also called Hong Kong “a vivid character in its own right.” In the Asian Review of Books, Ho noted that “There’s a richness to Chan’s descriptions.” In summary, wrote Margaret Cannon in the Toronto Globe and Mail, The Borrowed is not only “highly informative,” but also “great fun.”

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Booklist, December 1, 2016, Christine Tran, review of The Borrowed, p. 28.

  • Globe and Mail (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), March 24, 2017, Margaret Cannon, review of The Borrowed.

  • Kirkus Reviews, November 1, 2016, review of The Borrowed.

  • Publishers Weekly, November 21, 2016,  review of The Borrowed, p. 91.

ONLINE

  • Asian Ave, http://asianavemag.com/ (June 5, 2017), Amy Ng, review of The Borrowed.

  • Asian Review of Books, http://asianreviewofbooks.com/ (March 25, 2017), Melanie Ho, review of The Borrowed.

  • Asia Times, http://www.atimes.com/ (May 13, 2017), Melanie Ho, author interview.

  • Books from Taiwan, http://booksfromtaiwan.tw/ (September 6, 2017), author profile.

  • Crime Fiction Lover, http://www.crimefictionlover.com/ (August 19, 2016), review of The Borrowed.

  • Hong Kong International Literary Festival Website, http://www.festival.org.hk/ (September 6, 2017), author profile.

  • Literary Treats, https://literarytreats.com/ (April 18, 2017), review of The Borrowed.

  • Metropoli d’Asia, http://www.metropolidasia.it/ (September 6, 2017), book description.

  • South China Morning Post Online, http://www.scmp.com/ (March 28, 2017),  Melanie Ho, review of The Borrowed.

  • 13.67 ( six novellas; in Chinese) 2015
1. The borrowed LCCN 2017932033 Type of material Book Personal name Chan, Ho-Kei, 1975- author. Uniform title Short stories. Selections. English Main title The borrowed / Chan Ho-Kei ; translated from the Chinese by Jeremy Tiang. Edition First Grove Atlantic edition. Published/Produced New York : Black Cat, an imprint of Grove Atlantic, 2017. ©2016 Description 502 pages ; 21 cm ISBN 9780802125880 (paperback) 0802125883 (paperback) (eISBN) CALL NUMBER Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms
  • House of Anansi - https://houseofanansi.com/products/the-borrowed

    Chan Ho-Kei
    CHAN HO-KEI was raised in Hong Kong. He has won the Mystery Writers of Taiwan Award for his short stories, and in 2011, his debut novel, The Man Who Sold the World, won the Soji Shimada Mystery Award, the most prestigious mystery award in the Chinese-speaking world. It has been published in five countries.

  • Hong Kong International Literary Festival - http://www.festival.org.hk/writers/chan-ho-kei/

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    THE HONG KONG INTERNATIONAL LITERARY FESTIVAL
    ABOUT US
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    HOMEWRITERSWRITER'S BIO
    CHAN HO-KEI
    Chan Ho-kei was born and raised in Hong Kong. He made his debut as a writer in 2008 with the short story “The Murder Case of Jack and the Beanstalk,” which was shortlisted for the sixth Mystery Writers of Taiwan Award. Chan reentered and won this award in the next year with “The Locked Room of Bluebeard.” In 2011, Chan’s novel The Man Who Sold the World won the biggest mystery award in the Chinese-speaking world, the Soji Shimada Award. The rights to his 2014 novel, The Borrowed, have been sold in over 10 countries and the film rights were sold to director Wong Kar-wai. His new book, In the Net, is a story about cyberbullying, social networks, hackers and vengeance.

    陳浩基於香港土生土長。2008年以童話推理作品《傑克魔豆殺人事件》入圍第六屆「台灣推理作家協會徵文獎」決選,翌年又以續作《藍鬍子的密室》贏得首獎。2011年,他以《遺忘.刑警》獲得「島田莊司推理小說獎」首獎。他的長篇作品《13.67》售出十多國版權,並獲知名導演王家衛買下電影版權。最新作品是以網上欺凌、社交網絡、黑客及復仇為主題的推理小說《網內人》。

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  • Books from Taiwan - http://booksfromtaiwan.tw/authors_info.php?id=18

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    Chan Ho-Kei

    陳浩基
    Chan Ho-Kei
    Chan Ho-Kei was born and raised in Hong Kong. He has worked as software engineer, scriptwriter, game designer and editor of comic magazines. His writing career started in 2008 at the age of thirty-three, with the short story ‘The Case of Jack and the Beanstalk,’ which was shortlisted for the Mystery Writers of Taiwan Award. He went on to win the award again the following year with ‘The Locked Room of Bluebeard.’

    In 2011, Chan’s first novel, THE MAN WHO SOLD THE WORLD, won the biggest mystery prize in the Chinese-speaking world, the Soji Shimada Mystery Award, and has subsequently been published in Taiwan (Crown), China (New Star), Japan (Bungeishunsha), Thailand (Nanmee) and Italy (Metropoli d’Asia).
    BOOKS

    S.T.E.P.

    THE BORROWED

    Mixing science fiction and the gritty realism of the best of the crime genre, these stories are like four speeding bullets fired by two of the Chinese-speaking world’s most original mystery writers.

    Category: Science Fiction, Mystery
    Publisher: Crown
    Date: 2015/3
    Pages: 336
    Length: 170,000 characters
    (approx. 110,000 words in English)
    .....

    THE BORROWED
    * Author Chan Ho-Kei
    * Translator Gigi Chang
    * Illustrator
    * 2015 Taipei Book Fair Award
    *
    * "THE BORROWED by Chan Ho-Kei s a unique crime novel from Hong Kong, not only telling the life of an exceptional detective by going backwards in time, but also telling the history of Hong Kong itself. A profund masterpiece on humanity, history and murder." -Tim Jung, Publishing Director at Atrium Verlag AG
    *

    The Borrowed is the story of Kwan Chun-Dok, a Hong Kong police officer who rises from constable to senior superintendent over the span of forty-six years (1967-2013), becoming a legend in the force as he does so. The book is divided into six chapters, each a stand-alone novella dealing witith an important case in Kwan’s career and taking place at a pivotal time in Hong Kong history: the riots of 1967, the conflict between the HK Police and the ICAC (Independent Commission Against Corruption) in 1977, the Handover in 1997, the SARS epidemic in 2003 and one last case in 2013, when Hong Kong is turning into a police state, a chillingly accurate portrait seemingly foreshadowing the Occupy Central movement.

    What makes The Borrowed unique is not just the structure, but the way the story is told in reverse-chronological order. The novel begins in 2013, with Kwan solving his final case on his deathbed, and goes back in time, finally reaching 1967, when he defuses a bomb plot and saves the life of a British inspector. The six chapters are linked in ways big and small. The novel’s real twist, however, comes at the end of the novel, in the very last line. Only then do the connections reveal themselves, that history is destined to repeat itself and how we have come full circle.

    The Borrowed is the portrait of a brilliant, Holmes-esque detective, as well as a chronicle of Hong Kong over the past fifty years. Although each chapter is a self-sustained, carefully constructed mystery, <> and it is on this level that it truly shines; a sweeping, ambitious crime drama that offers a startling insight into one of Asia’s greatest cities.
    *
    * Category: Crime Fiction
    Publisher: Crown
    Date: 2014/6
    Pages: 496
    Length: 280,000 characters
    * (approx. 150,000 words in English)
    *

    [#Not about Chan!]
    Issue 6
    China Times Open Book Award
    Bologna Ragazzi Award
    China Times Literary Award
    Chiu Ko Fiction Prize
    Feng Zikai Chinese Children’s Picture Book Award
    Macmillan Prize
    Chen Bochui Children’s Literature Award
    Wu San-Lien Award
    Soji Shimada Mystery Award
    Golden Tripod Award
    Taiwan Literary Award
    For general inquiries, please contact booksfromtaiwan.rights@gmail.com.
    For translation grants, please contact books@moc.gov.tw
    #
    Issue 6
    China Times Open Book Award
    Bologna Ragazzi Award
    China Times Literary Award
    Chiu Ko Fiction Prize
    Feng Zikai Chinese Children’s Picture Book Award
    Macmillan Prize
    Chen Bochui Children’s Literature Award
    Wu San-Lien Award
    Soji Shimada Mystery Award
    Golden Tripod Award
    Taiwan Literary Award
    For general inquiries, please contact booksfromtaiwan.rights@gmail.com.
    For translation grants, please contact books@moc.gov.tw
    Copyright © 2015-2017 Ministry of Culture, Taiwan (R.O.C.) | http://english.moc.gov.tw/ | Tel +886-2-8512-6000 Ministry of Culture, Taiwan (R.O.C.) Vistors: 319868

  • Metropoli d'Asia - http://www.metropolidasia.it/libro-dettaglio-world-rights.php?id_lib=22&lang=en

    http://www.metropolidasia.it/libro-dettaglio-world-rights.php?id_lib=22&lang=en
    Downloaded September 6, 2017
    Chan Ho Kei
    Yiwang Xingjing. The Man who Sold the World
    Genre: Detective Novel
    Pages: 280
    Origin: Hong Kong
    Xu Youyi wakes up in his car. He doesn't remember why he didn't sleep at home and how he got to that park so far form his district. Smelling his jacket he understands that maybe he is having an awful hung over. He can't remember what happened the night before, and the previous ones.
    Everything for him is usual but at the same time oddly unfamiliar. The only thing clear in his mind is the image of two corpses bleeding on the floor: the sensational murder he is investigating. And this is quite strange because his lapse of memory is far greater than he has thought: the murder happened six years before.
    The case has already been solved but something in the reconstruction of the events doesn't match. With the help of a young journalist, Xu Yuoyi starts working on a different trail which lead to a suspect ignored by the previous investigation.
    The journalist therefore asks for an identikit of the suspect and when she discovers that he is the man who is standing in front of her, everything seems to rush to a tragic ending. Who is really the policeman? Is he Yan Zhicheng or Xu Youyi? Is he the murderer?... As in great detective stories nothing would be completely clear until the last piece is set.

    About the author: Chan Ho Kei is a young computer scientist who had been in various careers; he worked as a software engineer, a script writer, a game designer and an editor of comic magazines. His debut as a writer is dated 2008, when his short story The Murder Case of Jack and the Beanstalk has been shortlisted in the Mystery Writers of Taiwan Award.
    With the novel The Locked Room of Bluebeard he won the following edition of the award. The Man who Sold the World is his latest novel. Winner of the second edition of the Soji Shimada Award it has been published in Taiwan and will be published in China, Japan, Thailand and Malaysia.
    Focus on: Winner of the Soji Shimada Mystery Award (Taiwan - 2011). A gripping plot with an unexpected twist at the end. A puzzle with an inconceivable but perfectly logical solution.

Ho-kei, Chan: THE BORROWED
Kirkus Reviews.
(Nov. 1, 2016):
COPYRIGHT 2016 Kirkus Media LLC
http://www.kirkusreviews.com/
Full Text: 
Ho-kei, Chan THE BORROWED Black Cat/Grove (Adult Fiction) $16.00 1, 3 ISBN: 978-0-8021-2588-0
Like Columbo but not funny.This is Soji Shimada Mystery Award winner Chan's first novel to be translated into
English; it's a lengthy, ambitious tale about a legendary detective named Kwan Chun-dok, examining his career from
the mid-1960s to the present day--and examining Kwan's beat, Hong Kong, during those fraught, turbulent years.
Arranged in free-standing but interconnected novellas, proceeding in reverse chronological order, the book charts
Kwan's evolution from savvy field investigator to head of the force's intelligence division against the backdrop of such
historical events as the 1967 leftist riot, the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre, and the epochal handover of 1997.
Through these juxtapositions, Chan attempts to embroider both cultural history and psychological character study, but
he fails to profitably exploit his setting or word count in this aim; the historical details provide sporadically engaging
window dressing, but Chan's characters seldom address them directly, and Kwan himself remains something of a
cipher, a genius at deduction with a generic, Tintin-like good-guy effect. <>: the
meat of the book is Kwan's crime-solving, and the author <> of wrangling complex
exposition in scenarios involving such calumny as an escaped nemesis bent on revenge, a kidnapping, and a series of
terrorist bombings. Institutional corruption and the public's growing mistrust of the police emerge as the narrative's
glum, overarching themes, lending the backward storytelling scheme a melancholy poignancy--but, despite Chan's
aspirations to historical, cultural, and psychological insight, the real satisfaction here is found in the meat-and-potatoes
cops-and-robbers material. Sprawling and dense, this novel will satisfy your procedural jones, but don't look for more
than a cursory reckoning with the troubled history of Hong Kong.
Source Citation   (MLA 8th
Edition)
"Ho-kei, Chan: THE BORROWED." Kirkus Reviews, 1 Nov. 2016. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?
p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA468389136&it=r&asid=f23be4d0de399418a480d50b49f9c06d.
Accessed 5 Sept. 2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A468389136

---

9/5/2017 General OneFile - Saved Articles
http://go.galegroup.com/ps/marklist.do?actionCmd=GET_MARK_LIST&userGroupName=schlager&inPS=true&prodId=ITOF&ts=1504636740255 2/3
The Borrowed
Christine Tran
Booklist.
113.7 (Dec. 1, 2016): p28.
COPYRIGHT 2016 American Library Association
http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/publishing/booklist_publications/booklist/booklist.cfm
Full Text: 
The Borrowed.
By Chan Ho-Kei. Tr. by Jeremy Tiang.
Jan. 2017. 496p. Black Cat, paper, $16 (9780802125880); e book, $16 (9780802189820).
In six related novellas, Chan Ho-Kei tracks backward through iconic detective Kwan Chun-dok's police career, his
relationship with protege Sonny Lok, and six decades of Hong Kong's history. Ho-kei creates powerful social
commentary by framing classic mystery stories within pivotal events, such as the anxiety-ridden chaos surrounding
Hong Kong's 1997 changeover from UK to Chinese governance, and the 1960s terrorist attacks against the British
government. In "The Prisoner's Dilemma," Kwan coaches Lok in his philosophy of serving the greater good by
embracing the gray areas outside of police protocol when they take on the triads to solve the murder of a teenage pop
star. In "The Balance of Themis," a tense mashup of police procedural and investigative logic will force readers to the
edge of their seats as Kwan eschews protocol in a deadly hostage situation. Award-winning Hong Kong author Ho-kei's
English-language debut<< is a strong collection>> of classic mysteries <>.--Christine Tran
Source Citation   (MLA 8th
Edition)
Tran, Christine. "The Borrowed." Booklist, 1 Dec. 2016, p. 28+. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?
p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA474718206&it=r&asid=620eb5d01f9bc0372489261973952a71.
Accessed 5 Sept. 2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A474718206

---

9/5/2017 General OneFile - Saved Articles
http://go.galegroup.com/ps/marklist.do?actionCmd=GET_MARK_LIST&userGroupName=schlager&inPS=true&prodId=ITOF&ts=1504636740255 3/3
The Borrowed
Publishers Weekly.
263.47 (Nov. 21, 2016): p91.
COPYRIGHT 2016 PWxyz, LLC
http://www.publishersweekly.com/
Full Text: 
* The Borrowed
Chan Ho-kei, trans. from the Chinese by Jeremy Tang. Black Cat, $16 trade paper (496p) ISBN 978-0-8021-2588-0
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Retired detective Kwon Chun-dok, the Sherlock Holmes--like hero of this ambitious episodic crime novel set in Hong
Kong from Chan (The Man Who Sold the World), is on his deathbed in 2013, working on a murder case with the aid of
his mentee, Insp. Sunny Lok. Subsequent sections, introduced in reverse chronological order, focus on the infamous
triads of Hong Kong organized crime (in 2003), the transfer of sovereignty from the U.K. to China (in 1997), the
Tiananmen Square riots (in 1989), and more. Trained in England, the brilliant Chun-dok has been a great success,
"silently filling a glorious page of the history of Hong Kong policing." The mysteries he solves, as clever as they may
be, can feel a bit old-fashioned. The author's real goal is to tell a history of modern Hong Kong, as Chan explains in his
afterword. As a "social narrative" of the city, to use his phrase, the story is fascinating. Agent: Markus Hoffmann^Regal
Floffmann & Associates. (Jan.)
Source Citation   (MLA 8th
Edition)
"The Borrowed." Publishers Weekly, 21 Nov. 2016, p. 91. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?
p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA471273956&it=r&asid=9a932103ca2b16a2a098c252eaff2583.
Accessed 5 Sept. 2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A471273956

"Ho-kei, Chan: THE BORROWED." Kirkus Reviews, 1 Nov. 2016. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA468389136&it=r. Accessed 5 Sept. 2017. Tran, Christine. "The Borrowed." Booklist, 1 Dec. 2016, p. 28+. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA474718206&it=r. Accessed 5 Sept. 2017. "The Borrowed." Publishers Weekly, 21 Nov. 2016, p. 91. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do? p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA471273956&it=r. Accessed 5 Sept. 2017.