THE SITE FOR DIE HARD CRIME & THRILLER FANS
FeaturesNews

First look: New Chinese crime fiction

1 Mins read
cover of The Borrowed by Chan Ho-Kai

It’s been an exciting summer for virtual travel through the medium of crime fiction. We’ve been all over the States, to France and Poland, and Japanese crime fiction is really starting to fizz. Next stop… Hong Kong. And here’s the airplane that’s going to transport us there – The Borrowed, written by Chan Ho-Kei and translated by Jeremy Tiang.

The cover has a wonderfully vertical arrangement to its design, just like the architecture of the city it is set in. The year is 2013 and a ageing detective is dying. For 50 years, Inspector Kwan has been solving crimes while the Hong Kong, China, and the wider world, changed around him. When his partner, Detective Lok, comes to his deathbed to ask for help, Kwan is tempted into one more case. But this isn’t just any case. As the detectives discover, it’s one that locks into five of Kwan’s previous investigations spanning his 50 on the force.

Publisher Head of Zeus is promising something epic here, with themes including love, honour, race, class, jealousy and revenge. It’s the story of Hong Kong, and it’s from an author who’s designed games, edited manga, lectured and won the Soji Shimada Mystery Prize. Apparently, that’s regarded as the world’s top Chinese-language mystery writing award (even though Soji Shimada is Japanese).

The hardcover and Kindle versions will be available at £18.99 and £5.03 respectively. Enjoy our first look at this novel, and pre-order your copy below.

Chinese crime fiction, The Borrowed, Chan Ho-Kei
Chinese crime fiction, The Borrowed, Chan Ho-Kei
Chinese crime fiction, The Borrowed, Chan Ho-Kei


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related posts
PrintReviews

Phantom Pass by André M Louw

South African author André M Louw makes a notable entrance to the crime genre with a debut that balances fully fleshed-out characters with a breakneck pace. The story commences with the discovery of Mark Whitcombe, a prominent 67-year-old retired lawyer whose mutilated corpse is found…
iBookKindlePrintReviews

The Drowning Place by Sarah Hilary

Sarah Hilary’s heady mix of razor-sharp characterisation and 4K-ready sense of place have stood her in good stead since 2014, when she debuted with Someone Else’s Skin and in the process introduced London-based DI Marnie Rome to crime fiction lovers. We reviewed that first novel…
KindlePrintReviews

Falls the Shadow by Mike Nicol

Mike Nicol’s last book, Hammerman – A Walking Shadow, concluded a five-book series featuring the surfing private investigator Fish Pescado and lawyer Vicki Kahn. With his latest novel, the South African author starts afresh and introduces a police officer as his protagonist. However, this is…
Crime Fiction Lover