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City Like Water by Dorothy Tse book review: the quiet dissent of a city unravelling

Tse’s work refuses to forget what has often been censored, observing the surreal within the mundane

Dorothy Tse’s stunning novella City Like Water fictionalises the quiet dissent of a city unravelling. Told in vignettes, this location is, and is not, a distorting mirror for 21st-century Hong Kong, marked by neocolonial history and the “muddied, contaminated memories” ghosting its streets.

Here, remembrance is fluid. This city has also long been a harbour for refugees, whose descendants remain. But its inhabitants hurry through a landscape of nightmarish surveillance, holding the knowledge that “every person is a potential criminal”. 

Still, their lives continue amid the hum. As reality blurs into phantasmagoria, the narrator emerges, a teenage boy grappling with the anxiety of a world that turns to sea before him. He struggles to unearth answers about his little sister’s disappearance, seeking distraction in ‘the siren songs of the toe cleavage displayed by sex-workers near his home.

In school, his classmates are given slips to sign, which state “I promise not to kill myself.” When his poodle-haired mother joins a band of housewives protesting the sale of fake lotus roots, the city’s shadows grow teeth. 

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Readers less familiar with Hong Kong’s past might miss some of Tse’s references to famous protests, recalling the violence meted onto activists from the pro-democracy movement. Tse traces these happenings while diving into intimate spaces of apartments, subways, lifts and wet markets with visceral relish.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

Her poetic prose is lusciously translated from Chinese by Natascha Bruce, who previously collaborated with Tse on her groundbreaking debut novel, Owlish. Tse’s work refuses to forget what has often been censored, observing the surreal within the mundane. City Like Water reminds us to pay careful attention.

City Like Water by Dorothy Tse, translated by Natascha Bruce is out now (Fitzcarraldo, £12.99)

You can buy it from the Big Issue shop on bookshop.org, which helps to support Big Issue and independent bookshops.

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