Sunday, 11 March 2007

The Man HK International Literary Festival

In 2001, it was called the "Hong Kong Literary Festival". In 2003, it turned into a publishers' and literary agents' junket when it became the "Hong Kong International Literary Festival". Since the time MAN Investments--the same sponsor of the Booker Prize--became the primary sponsor of this event, the MAN Hong Kong International Literary Festival has grown into the biggest, most prestigious literary event in Asia.

Since 2005, every year's Booker Prize winner visits Hong Kong to give a lecture or workshop. It was too bad that I missed Alan Hollinghurst's talk at Hong Kong University.

To sign up for some of the events, visit this site.

If you're Asian and you happen to have a novel in the works, you still have time to submit an entry to win the MAN Asian Literary Prize.

Wednesday, 7 March 2007

The 35th Hong Kong Arts Festival

I go to around 4-5 events of the Hong Kong Arts Festival every year. My picks for this year include:

a. Life is Rhythm with the Camut Band - They do capoeira. This was my first try.
b. Youssou N'Dour - Remember Seven Seconds with Neneh Cherry? Lyrics here.
c. 1984 - a play adapted from George Orwell's novel. Actor Tim Robbins directs.
d. Twelfth Night - I never miss Shakespeare; Propeller performs.
e. The Taming of the Shrew - It would be nice to see their take...I wonder what Bianca is like--really.

Enjoy the show!

Sunday, 4 March 2007

Run, Hong Kong, Run


Today marks an adrenalin-packed event in Hong Kong. The entire city shall be watching The Standard Chartered Hong Kong Marathon.

My friend's husband and father-in-law shall be competing in the 10 km run. Her occasional meanderings can be found here.

Turning Japanese


Fresh fruit, seafood and natural ingredients are flown into Hong Kong every day. This is what makes Hong Kong's unlimited selection of mid-range to high-end Japanese restaurants provide the freshest raw stuff imaginable!

On a personal note, I frequent Japanese restaurants whenever I need a culinary boost and a dietary detox. Here are my favourite non-hotel Japanese restaurants, in no particular order:



  • Hanagushi - right smack in the middle of LKF Friday-night action

  • Watami - this used to be a popular ballroom-dancing spot

  • Inaho Tei - recently discovered

  • Wasabisabi - come here for the Fashion TV catwalk experience. Scroll down for the restaurant name

  • Benkay - a discreet, non-ostentatious but seriously Japanese restaurant

  • DOZO - earn Asiamiles while dining here

  • Chef - another good Japanese restaurant on D'Aguilar Street, LKF, Central

Thursday, 1 March 2007

Harbour envy


It is a foggy evening in the autumn of 2006, and yet Hong Kong's lights refuse to go dim amidst the clouds.

This is resilience. This is the heart of Hong Kong's brightness.

And on the surface is a wondrous, glorious view of Central onboard the Lucky Star. On a sad note, however, the old Star Ferry pier is no more. But whoever said the new one isn't nice?

If you want to wine or dine with this glamorous view in the background, the places to visit include:

  • any of the restaurants on One Peking Road, like the Aqua group or on the cheaper side, the Chinese restaurant on the ninth floor;
  • Philippe Starck's odd yet peachy bar and restaurant called FELIX, which is on the 28th floor of the Peninsula and built with its own exclusive lift, I might add; and
  • The Hong Kong Museum of Art.

I *Heart* Hong Kong


I have been living here for the past 5 1/2 years. In that time I've become a mom, a nervous wreck, an amateur publicist, a serious writer, an accidental MBA student, a comic actor (me? do comedy? are you serious???), and all that.


Hong Kong has a way of bringing out the full range of a person's skills and qualities. Its vibrant, cross-cultural influx of people to meet, greet and, when necessary, ignore have made a great impact on me. Hong Kong humour, for example, is safe and best experienced with a drink. At a regular Irish-esque pub, people avoid the following: politics, religion, race and all talk about the sordidness of life. Perhaps living in Hong Kong can be quite unbearable for some that these lofty yet trite "ideas" can be stifling and exhausting. Most people work more than 12 hours a day in Hong Kong--one must understand. It is no wonder, then, that one would oftentimes hear the words:


WORK HARD, PLAY HARD.


And oh, does one play hard! Wednesday is ladies' night; Thursday is ladies' night; Friday night is the most wicked of them all; Saturday is Friday's flattering copycat; and Sunday? Where goes Sunday? It passes us by just like another wave passing through the harbour.


5 1/2 years ago, I left another city, some 711 miles southwest of Hong Kong, which I sorely miss, and thus return to from time to time.


Yet Hong Kong is my home for now. It has its pitfalls, for sure--every place in the world does, but it is paradise for now. I became a mother in Hong Kong. It is not the easiest job to take on, but Hong Kong provides enough help. Without help, Hong Kong would not survive.


Let me welcome you to Asia's World City.