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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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THE IMPOSSIBLE CITY

Karen Cheung

A Hong Kong Memoir

An insider's account of Hong Kong--from its tenacious counterculture and robust underground music scene, to its unique history of youth-led protest--that explores what it means to survive in a city of broken promiseses.
Nothing survives in this city. But in a place that never allowed you to write your own history, even remembrance can be a radical act.

Hong Kong has long been known as a city of extremes: a former colony of the United Kingdom that today exists at the margins of an authoritarian, ascendant China; a city rocked by mass protests, where residents once rallied against threats to their democracy and freedoms. But it is also misunderstood and often romanticized, its history and politics simplified for Western headlines. Drawing richly from her own experience, as well as interviews with musicians, protesters, and writers who have made Hong Kong their home, journalist Karen Cheung gives us an insider's view of this remarkable city at a critical moment in history - both for Hong Kong and democracies around the world.

Coming of age in the wake of Hong Kong's reunification with China in 1997, Cheung traverses the multifold identities available to her in childhood and beyond, whether that was her experience at an English-speaking international school where her classmates would grow up to be "global citizens" struggling to fit in with the rest of Hong Kong, or within her deeply traditional, multilingual family. Along the way, Cheung gives a personal account of what it's like to seek out affordable housing and mental healthcare in one of the world's most expensive cities. She also takes us deep into Hong Kong's vibrant indie music and literary scenes - youth-driven spaces of creative resistance. Inevitably, Cheung brings us with her to the protests, where her understanding of what it means to belong to Hong Kong finally crystallized.

Weaving together memoir, cultural criticism, and reportage, The Impossible City transcends borders to chart the parallel journeys of both a young woman and a city as they navigate the various, sometimes contradictory, paths of coming into one's own.

Karen Cheung is a writer and journalist from Hong Kong. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, Foreign Policy, The Rumpus, The Offing, and others. She was formerly a reporter at Hong Kong Free Press, and has worked for the Asia Art Archive, ArtAsiaPacific, and Still / Loud, an indie magazine about music and culture in Hong Kong.
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Published 2022-02-15 by Random House

Comments

Reflecting on the multivalenced reality of life in Hong Kong, journalist Cheung's debut leaps from one charged historical moment to the next to capture 'the many ways a city can disappear, but also the many ways we, its people, survive.'... A riveting portrait of a place that's as captivating as it is confounding.

With her radiant prose and incisive reporting, Karen Cheung renders modern-day Hong Kong with evocative detail in The Impossible City. The word 'protest' lingered in my head as I read Cheung's words about coming of age in her constantly shifting city under the precarious specter of authoritarianism. There is an unmissable passion and intelligence in this story as Cheung weaves together cultural criticism and memoir, insisting that Hong Kong - her Hong Kong - is worthy of our close attention and love.

English-language readers might not find a book that more fully captures Hong Kong in such visceral detail and humanity as Cheung's... It's a grim status report, to be sure, but Cheung doesn't quite let go of hope for that extraordinary city: '... and yet. Across the harbor, the lights are on.'

Karen Cheung is an amazingly good writer whose precise observations about Hong Kong puncture the gauzy clichés about mahjong and milk tea. In the Impossible City, she has produced an edgy, highly personal memoir about a generation living in cage-sized apartments, confronting tear gas, electronic surveillance, cultural confusion and depression, as they witness the disappearance of the city they call home.

Impossible City is a rare insider's view of Hong Kong at a pivotal moment for the city and, ultimately, for Cheung herself. Read more...

As the citizens of Hong Kong continue to push back against Communist Chinese rule, often to harsher and harsher punishment, stories from ground zero become even more crucial. Here, Karen Cheung details her own coming of age and attempts to reconcile her family's conservative values with the more progressive viewpoints she learns at her international school, and the ways that the citywide protests eventually affected her own mental health. Read more...

Karen Cheung has written a love song to Hong Kong. Her memoir hums with wide-eyed discoveries and the lowest heartache, quiet intimacies and street-shaking roars, the thrill of being lost in this massive, haunted, mythologized, neon city, yet finding oneself in the end.

In a book that should appeal to young protesters everywhere, the author eloquently demonstrates how 'it takes work not to simply pass through a place but instead to become part of it.' Hong Kong is in dire straits, and Cheung brings us to the front lines to offer a clearer understanding of the circumstances. A powerful memoir of love and anguish in a cold financial capital with an underbelly of vibrant, freedom-loving youth.

Karen Cheung's new book, The Impossible City: A Hong Kong Memoir, about growing up and coming of age in a city she feels is like no other, is characterized by a narrative style both intimate and candid. It's hard to avoid being swept up by her story from the beginning... Cheung explains at the start of her memoir that she never thought she would write a book about Hong Kong. Yet as she thought about her coming-of-age years and how they neatly coincided with Hong Kong's first two decades after the handover, she worried she would one day forget. She changed her mind; it was a good choice. Read more...

Polish: Burda Media Polska

Spanning over 20 years, Cheung's debut memoir examines her tumultuous childhood and young adulthood in Hong Kong. It tragically juxtaposes the author's severe depression with the disintegration of democracy in Hong Kong, depicting a heartrending destruction of Hongkongese cultural identity... An outstanding contribution for any library about one personal experience of political upheaval in Hong Kong.