Stephanie Han is the author of the story collection Swimming in Hong Kong. She lives in Honolulu, Hawaii, and Mui Wo, Hong Kong.
Q: Over how long a period did you write the stories in
Swimming in Hong Kong?
A: I began writing the stories in 1997 and by 2003 the
initial drafts of all were complete. I did rewrite and edit, however, and so
some of the stories look rather different than they did in 2003.
Q: How did you decide on the order in which to arrange the
stories in the collection?
A: The stories were not ordered in the way that they
currently read--this was rearranged by the publisher. I had initially ordered
them chronologically.
There was also one story that was eliminated from the
collection. I like the way that the publisher decided to order the stories and
am grateful that they took the time to do this.
Q: Do you see similar themes running through the stories?
A: Yes, thematically I seem to focus on ideas of place,
belonging, identity, movement, and the questions that surround love and our
sense of personal myth.
Q: Why did you choose Swimming in Hong Kong (also the title
of the last story) as the book's title?
A: The stories are set in the U.S., Korea and Hong Kong,
and there is an overarching exploration of movement and the chaos and vibrancy
that can emerge from polyculturalism.
Given Hong Kong's colonial past, as well as its position as
a trading port and site of exchange, I believe that it occupies this space in
the minds of many people.
So the title fit the collection's themes and it is also
fun--people do not think about swimming in Hong Kong, but that is what many do,
at least metaphorically.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I'm writing a book about a young person in Waikiki. I've
worked on this narrator character for several years. I finally have it down, so
plan on completing the draft this year. It's a serious departure from my
previous work.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I have two manuscripts that I'm now trying to place with
publishers. One is a poetry manuscript, Passing in the Middle Kingdom, that
was a semi-finalist for the Wilder Poetry Manuscript Award, 2017, and details
life in Mui Wo, Lantau, a small rural village outside of Hong Kong.
I also have a completed literary criticism manuscript, The
Art of Asian America, a study of the aesthetics of the 21st century Asian
American Novel (2000-2010) that recasts the very definition of “Asian American.”
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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