Folding Beijing
Author | Hao Jingfang |
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Original title | 北京折叠 |
Translator | Ken Liu |
Country | China |
Language | Chinese |
Genre | Chinese science fiction |
Publication date | 2012 |
Folding Beijing | |
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Hanyu Pinyin | Běijīng zhédié |
Folding Beijing (simplified Chinese: 北京折叠; traditional Chinese: 北京折疊; lit. 'Beijing Folds') is a science fiction novelette by the Chinese writer Hao Jingfang.
This work was originally posted on newsmth.net, the BBS of Tsinghua University, in December 2012. It took the author around 1 month to plan, and 3 days to write.[1] It was later published in two Chinese magazines in 2014.
An English translation by Ken Liu was published in 2015 on Uncanny Magazine.[2] It won the 2016 Hugo Award for Best Novelette.
In September 2020 it was announced that Folding Beijing will be adapted into a movie titled Folding City, produced by Chinese film production company Wanda Media and is expected to be released between 2021 and 2022.[3]
Plot
In an unspecified future,
Lao Dao, a waste processing worker of the third class, finds a message from Qin Tian, a graduate student in the second class. Qin offers Lao Dao money, if he can delivery a love letter to Yi Yan, Qin's lover in the first class. To make enough money for his adopted daughter Tangtang's kindergarten tuition, Lao Dao accepts this job. After he manages to arrive the first class, he finds that Yi Yan is actually a married woman, who offers Lao Dao more money to hide this fact from Qin. On the way back, Lao Dao is captured due to the lack of an identification of the first class, but rescued by Ge, a security official who was born in the third class. Lao Dao accidentally finds that the whole waste processing industry, the main economic pillar of the third world, can be easily replaced by technology – and it is only kept in order to provide jobs for those third class people. After dropping the response letter to Qin in the second class, Lao Dao comes back to the third class with newly made money, and continues his life.
References
- ^ "《三体2》无缘本届雨果奖……别失落,我们还有她". 2016-04-27. Archived from the original on 2016-10-12. Retrieved 2016-08-30.
- ^ "Translations." Ken Liu Official Website. Retrieved on Aug 29, 2016.
- ^ "Chinese author's award-winning novelette to be adapted into film". China Daily. 22 September 2020. Retrieved 27 September 2020.