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Horizon Hong Kong

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Pub Date 1 Jul 2026 | Archive Date 31 Aug 2026


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Description

“A collection of heartbreaks and awakenings set to lightning.” —Junot Díaz, author, This Is How You Lose Her

A siren call to Hong Kong’s yesterday, today, and tomorrow, envisioned by one of the city’s most prescient and unapologetic writers.


One of Hong Kong’s leading English writers, Xu Xi investigates and invigorates the transnational, transcultural, and translingual dimensions of her beloved city in these 22 stories covering the 1960s to the present day. Written against the backdrop of tremendous political change—from Hong Kong’s transformation from a British colony to a Chinese Special Administrative Region in 1997 to the political turmoil of the 2014 Occupy Hong Kong protests and the 2019 Polytechnic University occupation—Xu’s stories capture the intimate realities of lives led and choices made under the shadow of a city that looms large in our imagination. 

A cast of idiosyncratic local and expatriate characters navigates what it means to love, leave, and return again and again to their home city: a young girl obsesses over an orange-haired lady from Chung King Mansion; a massage therapist practices English with a client; a woman appeals to reinstate her American work visa or face deportation; a man reluctantly attends his high school’s thirty-fifth reunion dinner; and monkeys are appointed academic residency at the local university.

Horizon Hong Kong demonstrates the power and range of Xu Xi’s oeuvre, its stories Hong Kong’s and also the world’s.

“A collection of heartbreaks and awakenings set to lightning.” —Junot Díaz, author, This Is How You Lose Her

A siren call to Hong Kong’s yesterday, today, and tomorrow, envisioned by one of the city’s...


Advance Praise

“A brilliant moving and startling collection by one of the most brilliant moving and startling writers alive. I lack the words to capture the full sweep of these uncommonly beautiful stories, the human majesty and impossible histories they encompass. If you’re going to read one book of stories this year, read Horizon Hong Kong, a collection of heartbreaks and awakenings set to lightning. A truly towering achievement.”
—Junot Díaz, author, This Is How You Lose Her and The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao  

“This is the city written aslant: anguish, desire, and cosmopolitan complexity are rendered with sparky, clever wisdom and formal inventiveness. Horizon Hong Kong offers above all a focused compassion for those who carry in their hearts the layered history of this place; the pull to stay or leave, the contest of languages, the colonial history and the complications of the handover and its aftermath.” 
—Gail Jones, author, Salonika Burning and One Another

“This wonderful collection is long overdue. Xu Xi’s stories have formidable range, and with searing insight, she can recreate the isolation of being half a world from friends and family as skillfully as she expresses rage against disappearances, whether what is lost are children or sex workers or the city of Hong Kong itself. Politics from Beijing to London to New York are a constant backdrop to her characters’ lives. There is a boldness to Xu Xi’s descriptions of a particularly female experience of the world. Though she has often been called a transnational writer, she captures the universal in migration, separation, family obligations and our dreams, ambitions and disappointments all set against an ever-changing and turbulent Hong Kong.”
—Kim Echlin, author, The Disappeared

“Xu Xi portrays the cosmopolitan salad bowls of Hong Kong, America, and Europe with humor and pathos, with the subtlety, complexity, and inherent contradictions of a writer who knows her source. From the realist 1960s through present day to the speculative future, these diverse stories illuminate and challenge. They skewer shallowness and deeply move us.”
—Alison Wong, author, As the Earth Turns Silver

“The greatest pleasure of Xu Xi’s kaleidoscopic collection lies in how she captures the psychological tensions of lives shaped by an ever-changing, cosmopolitan city . . . Xu Xi’s characters are poised at various thresholds, each grappling with a boundary that beckons and restrains, alluring in its promise yet coercive in its limits.”
—Dorothy Tse, author, Owlish

“Hong Kong and its unruly denizens have never burned brighter or left a deeper impression on the soul than in Xu Xi’s remarkable corpus of fiction. To read her is to step into the gaze of someone who has had her eye on the truest, the most shameful, and also the most loving and enduring parts of our inner selves; to read her is to realize you’re in the hands of one of the most beguiling storytellers our culture has ever produced.”
—Daryl Qilin Yam, author, Lovelier, Lonelier

“I have been a fan of both Xu Xi’s short fiction and her essays for the twenty-six years I’ve known her. I teach her work regularly, every semester in fact. I love, for instance, how her essay 'Citizenship' and her satirical fiction 'All About Skin' are in dialogue with one another about national and ethnic identity. Whether writing fiction or essays, Xu Xi is always crossing boundaries and surprising us with her observations about displacement, hybridity, and the remarkable contradiction at the heart of her work: an unsentimental nostalgia for a lost Hong Kong, paired with a critical wonder about the rest of the world. I’m grateful to have a book that collects so much of her work under one cover.”
—Robin Hemley, author, How to Change History

“In these 22 luminous and unforgettable stories, Xu Xi deftly sets the demands of modern individuality against the obligations of memory, family, history, politics, and, most stubbornly, place—Hong Kong, a city caught between East and West, rich and poor. The results are electric. This is a collection to treasure.”
—Robert Anthony Siegel, author, Criminals 

“A brilliant moving and startling collection by one of the most brilliant moving and startling writers alive. I lack the words to capture the full sweep of these uncommonly beautiful stories, the...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781958652251
PRICE 22.00
PAGES 312

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Featured Reviews

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Some cities are backdrops.
Hong Kong, in this collection, is pulse.

In Horizon Hong Kong, Xu Xi does not merely write about a place — she interrogates it, mourns it, argues with it, and loves it fiercely. Across twenty-two stories spanning the 1960s to the present (and reaching toward the speculative), she captures a Hong Kong that is colonial and postcolonial, intimate and global, tender and unsparing.

These stories unfold against seismic political shifts — the 1997 handover from Britain to China, the 2014 Occupy movement, the 2019 Polytechnic University siege — yet Xu Xi’s genius lies in her refusal to reduce history to headlines. Instead, she filters upheaval through private lives: a woman fighting deportation; a man confronting the awkward ghosts of a high school reunion; a girl transfixed by a stranger in Chung King Mansion; lovers, migrants, daughters, expatriates, all negotiating belonging in a city that is constantly redefining itself.

Language itself becomes contested terrain. English and Cantonese echo through the collection, not just as tools of communication but as markers of class, memory, and power. Xu Xi writes with a transnational sensibility that feels earned rather than ornamental — she understands the friction of hybridity, the ache of displacement, the complicated nostalgia for a place that may no longer exist except in recollection.

What’s most striking is the emotional range. The stories are sharp, often satirical, sometimes quietly devastating. They skew shallow cosmopolitanism one moment and, in the next, lay bare a loneliness so precise it almost startles. There is rage here — at erasure, at injustice, at the slow vanishing of a city’s soul — but there is also deep compassion for those caught within history’s machinery.

The collection feels kaleidoscopic without ever losing focus. Characters stand at thresholds: between languages, between passports, between eras. They grapple with whether to stay or leave, and what either choice will cost them. Hong Kong emerges not as a static setting but as a living contradiction — dazzling, fraught, stubbornly unforgettable.

It’s rare to encounter a short story collection that feels both intimate and expansive, that speaks so specifically of one city and yet resonates globally. Horizon Hong Kong does exactly that. It reminds us that cities are archives of longing — and that the act of telling their stories is, in itself, an act of preservation.

This is not just a collection to read. It’s one to return to.

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There's an incredible richness of variety to be found in this collection of short stories. There's characters from all walks of live, themes that run a gamut, not to mention a wonderfully wide range when it comes to when these various tales occur. Between all of that, and of course just the quality of Xu XI's writing, it's not just great reading, but it's hard for me to come away from these tales without feeling like I've been able to become more intimate with the city of Hong Kong, the changes that have transformed it, and the identity intersections that continue to shape life within it.

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A great collection from talented writer I haven`t heard of before. I responded stronger to the earlier works versus the last few short stories. I admit I'm not as familiar with the historical context, and am likely missing a ton of parallels. That said, the author is incredibly talented and imaginative. Every short story was unique and inventive.

The standouts for me were: The Yellow Line, Famine, and Servitude

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This is a great collection of short stories by a writer I haven't heard of before. I really enjoyed the variety of characters and themes throughout the book. It was very interesting to get a closer look at the city of Hong Kong and how its identity has changed over time. While some stories were stronger than others, the writing is unique and imaginative.

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