A Science Fiction Writer Wrestles With China’s Rise, and His Own Decline

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Asia Pacific|A Science Fiction Writer Wrestles With China’s Rise, and His Own Decline

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/27/world/asia/a-science-fiction-writer-wrestles-with-chinas-rise-and-his-own-decline.html

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the Global profile

In his stories, Han Song explores the disorientation accompanying China’s modernization, sometimes writing of unthinkable things that later came true.

A casually dressed man stands in a place that looks like an old factory.
Han Song, a science fiction writer, at an old steel mill turned leisure park, in Beijing in March.Credit...Gilles Sabrié for The New York Times

Vivian Wang

May 27, 2025, 12:01 a.m. ET

Science fiction is the business of imagining the future, but reading Han Song, one of China’s leading writers of the genre, can sometimes feel like reading recent history.

In 2000, he wrote a novel depicting the collapse of the World Trade Center. In 2016, another book imagined the world transformed into a giant hospital, with doctors taking people from their homes — as would happen at times during China’s coronavirus years.

For Mr. Han, 59, this means only that he had not gone far enough in imagining how dark or strange modern life could become.

“I thought I was just writing, but that it was impossible for it to happen,” he said of his novel “Hospital,” in which everyone is reduced to being a patient. “It actually happened just a few years later,” he said, referring to the pandemic. “This is an example of reality being more science fiction than science fiction.”

How the unthinkable can become reality has been Mr. Han’s subject for the past four decades. By day, he is a journalist at China’s state news agency, recording the country’s astonishing modernization. At night, he writes fiction to grapple with how disorienting that change can be.

His stories are bleak, grotesque and graphic. Some scrutinize the gap between China and the West, as in “The Passengers and the Creator,” a short story in which Chinese people worship a mysterious god called Boeing. Others imagine that China has displaced the United States as the world’s leading superpower. Many take ordinary settings, like subway trains, as backdrops for wild scenes of cannibalism or orgies.


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