Proverse Hong Kong
cemetery miss you
cemetery miss you
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The author writes: "Saa Ji-a name adopted by a host of Indian Subcontinent illegals and refugees in Hong Kong-tells not only his own story, but also the untold story of so many peripheral figures in Hong Kong, figures compelled into unimaginably intricate underworld networks-and not because of ethical unsoundness or suspectness. Instead, these perpetually marginalized and institutionally desperate figures have no other options. Saa Ji speaks of alterity in Hong Kong, of the otherness we all ignore."
In her Preface to cemetery miss you, Ina Grigorova writes from New York: "The story of this man made me realize with chilled bones that there are places on earth where the known laws of social physics simply fall apart. ... The people and events in the story are grainy, pixelated, blinking on and off; reality has been exposed at the Planck scale where any apparent continuity breaks down. // Hong Kong is a good substrate for Sci-Fi constructs, not just because Hong Kong is so insanely futuristic, a spread-out tower of Babel, and not just because if you squint you can picture cemetery's characters crossing states more exotic than national boundaries (while borrowing each other's passports and pasts), but also because the book's very surface approaches quantum foam: objects of characterization blinking on and off, end-positioned subjects slipping away into the next sentence predicate; cause and effect inverting, like the thought-wave must flow in Saa Ji's native-tongue state... A text with the wheels of its own cognitive process both at work and exposed."
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