Xu Xi

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This is a Chinese name; the family name is Xu.

Xu Xi (traditional Chinese: 徐熙; born 1954) is the the pen name of the author of The Unwalled City (2001), Hong Kong Rose (1997), Chinese Walls (1994), Overleaf Hong Kong (2004), History's Fiction (2001) and Daughters of Hui (1996). She is also the Hong Kong regional editor of Routledge's Encyclopedia of Post-colonial Literature (second edition, 2005). Her work has been selected for the 2006 O. Henry Prize Stories collection and she has been named a South China Morning Post story contest winner. Hong Kong magazines like Muse run her writings from time to time.

[edit] Honors

The New York Times named her a pioneer English-language writer from Asia and the Voice of America featured her on their Chinese-language TV series "Cultural Odyssey." She has received a New York State Arts Foundation fiction fellowship, as well as several writer-in-residence positions at Kulturhuset USF in Bergen, Norway and the Jack Kerouac Project in Orlando, Florida. In 2004, she received the distinguished alumni award from her undergraduate alma mater, SUNY-Plattsburgh and is the recipient of Ploughshares' 2005 Cohen Award. She was a featured reader in the recent Hong Kong International Literary Festival.

[edit] Biography

Xu Xi is an Indonesian Chinese raised in Hong Kong. She speaks English and Cantonese, even though those languages are not her parents' native languages. Her father traded manganese ore and her mother was a pharmacist. Xu started writing stories in English when she was a child. As an adult, she spent several years working in international marketing before becoming a writer.

Xu Xi is a graduate of the MFA Program for Poets & Writers at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Now a U.S. citizen, she is on the MFA fiction faculty at Vermont College in Montpelier.

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