Tash Aw was born in Taipei to Malaysian parents.
He grew up in Kuala Lumpur before moving to Britain to attend
university. He is the author of three critically acclaimed novels, The
Harmony Silk Factory (2005), Map of the Invisible World (2009) and Five
Star Billionaire (2013), which have won the Whitbread First Novel Award,
a regional Commonwealth Writers' Prize and twice been longlisted for
the MAN Booker prize; they have also been translated into 23 languages.
His short fiction has won an O. Henry Prize and been published in A Public Space and the landmark Granta 100, amongst others.
His short fiction has won an O. Henry Prize and been published in A Public Space and the landmark Granta 100, amongst others.
1. FIVE STAR BILLIONAIRE
Phoebe is a factory girl who has come to Shanghai
with the promise of a job—but when she arrives she discovers that the
job doesn't exist. Gary is a country boy turned pop star who is spinning out of control. Justin
is in Shanghai to expand his family's real estate empire, only to find
that he might not be up to the task. He has long harbored a crush on Yinghui,
a poetry-loving, left-wing activist who has reinvented herself as a
successful Shanghai businesswoman. Yinghui is about to make a deal with
the shadowy , the five star billionaire of the novel, who with his
secrets and his schemes has a hand in the lives of each of the
characters. All bring their dreams and hopes to Shanghai,
the shining symbol of the New China, which, like the novel's
characters, is constantly in flux and which plays its own fateful role
in the lives of its inhabitants.
Five Star Billionaire is a dazzling, kaleidoscopic novel that offers
rare insight into the booming world of Shanghai, a city of elusive
identities and ever-changing skylines, of grand ambitions and outsize
dreams. Bursting with energy, contradictions, and the promise of
possibility, Tash Aw's remarkable new book is both poignant and comic,
exotic and familiar, cutting-edge and classic, suspenseful and yet
beautifully unhurried.
2. MAP OF THE INVISIBLE WORLD
What does it mean to lose your home? Adam and Johan are orphans, torn
from each other at an early age in post-Independence Indonesia. The
year is 1964, the start of Sukarno's so-called Year of Living
Dangerously, and sixteen-year-old Adam once again finds himself alone as
his foster father is taken away by soldiers. In a country teetering on
the brink of civil war, Adam is forced to travel to the capital Jakarta
in search of his father, and of his own identity. Memory, loss, the
turbulence of international politics of the 1960s – multiple strands
entwine in this novel of love and belonging.
3. THE HARMONY SILK FACTORY
Set in Malaysia in the 1930s and 40s, with the rumbling of the Second World War in the background and the Japanese about to invade, 'The Harmony Silk Factory' is the story of four people: Johnny, an infamous Chinaman – a salesman, a fraudster, possibly a murderer – whose shop house, The Harmony Silk Factory, he uses as a front for his illegal businesses; Snow Soong, the beautiful daughter of one of the Kinta Valley's most prominent families, who dies giving birth to one of the novel's narrators; Kunichika, a Japanese officer who loves Snow too; and an Englishman, Peter Wormwood, who went to Malaysia like many English but never came back, who also loved Snow to the end of his life. A journey the four of them take into the jungle has a devastating effect on all of them, and brilliantly exposes the cultural tensions of the era.
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