Kit Fan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
Fan Chun Kit

1979 (age 4647)
Hong Kong
Education
OccupationsAuthor, poet, novelist, critic
Yearsactive2006–present
Kit Fan
Born
Fan Chun Kit

1979 (age 4647)
Hong Kong
Education
OccupationsAuthor, poet, novelist, critic
Years active2006–present
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese范進傑
Simplified Chinese范进杰
Hanyu PinyinFàn Jìnjié
JyutpingFaan6 Zeon3-git6
Websitewww.kitfan.net

Kit Fan FRSL (范進傑; born 1979) is an author and poet from Hong Kong who now lives in the United Kingdom.[1][2] In 2011, his poetry book Paper Scissors Stone won the Hong Kong University International Poetry Prize. In 2021, his first novel Diamond Hill was published with critical acclaim. In 2022, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. In 2023, His third poetry collection The Ink Cloud Reader was shortlisted for the Forward Prize and the T. S. Eliot Prize.

Fan was born and raised in Hong Kong and studied at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, before moving to the UK at the age of 21.[1] He completed his PhD at the University of York on Thom Gunn.[1] His first book of poetry, Paper Scissors Stone, published in 2011, won the Hong Kong University International Poetry Prize and his second, As Slow as Possible, released in 2018, was recommended by the Poetry Book Society, The Guardian and the Irish Times.[3]

His first novel, Diamond Hill, was written between 2016 and 2019[4] and he received a Northern Writers Award for it while in progress in 2018; it was published in May 2021.[5] It was described by The Guardian as "a thoroughly enjoyable and profound exploration of powerlessness, identity and the evolution of a city"[6] and by The Wall Street Journal as a "textured, unsettled portrait of a territory facing a decisive ending".[7] It is set in the Diamond Hill area of Hong Kong in 1987, when the area – once known for its film studios – was a shanty town. The novel follows the narrator, a former heroin addict nicknamed Buddha,[7] who has been sent to live in a nunnery (based on the Chi Lin Nunnery).[4]

Fan was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2022.[8]

In 2023, Fan was shortlisted for Forward Prize and T. S. Eliot Prize for his poetry collection The Ink Cloud Reader[9]

Works

  • Paper Scissors Stone, 2011 (poetry)
  • As Slow as Possible, 2018 (poetry)
  • Diamond Hill, 2021 (novel)
  • The Ink Cloud Reader, 2023 (poetry)

Service to Creative Industries

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI