LATEST ENTRIES


Introducing H.A.L. author Hunter Braithwaite

Hunter Braithwaite was born in the Philippines and raised in Germany and America. He studied literature at the College of William and Mary in Virginia. He’s worked as a travel journalist, arts writer, and dishwasher. Past publications include National Geographic, City Weekend, and Time Out Shanghai. He’s currently working on a collection of short fiction.

Phone Calls (from Groupthink)
Sometimes I work backwards to create premonitory dreams. I look for auguries. Clouds moving quickly or the eye contact of strangers. Omens help because they point to reason. Nothing is tougher than unreasonable loss.

The night the police came I might have been dreaming a banging noise. I think of crunching ice with my teeth, bits of broken ice sliding down my face until they melt. Then my teeth bite stones until they begin to break themselves. The noise brings me back to the real world, the one without symbols, and becomes the sound of a gloved knuckle rapping on our oak door. The doorbell rings too. I went downstairs–I remember the feeling of each one. The carpet mashing beneath my weight, and then springing up again. Continue reading…

On Death
“I will spend my life trying to understand the functioning of remembering, which is not the opposite of forgetting, but rather its lining.”Sans Soleil

“She was so depressed she just walked into the river. Drowned herself right there in the water behind you. You know how bad it must be to convince your body to sink, not float?”

“Yes,” I said, meaning no. “I guess I do.”

Saying you have a lot of deaths in the family is like saying you have a lot of births. But suicides? And how should you remember those who wanted to be forgotten? And when you finally do forget, when their faces are lost to clouds and then just gray, how do you describe what they once were, and what they’ve done since? There are so many types of death—all affect the dead the least. The woman that walked stubbornly into the shallow waters of the Lynnhaven was my great aunt. And this part of the river is shallow. Nothing but reeds and mud for at least fifteen yards. Continue reading…

Motorcycles
We watched her fall. Or rather, the cars in front of us watched her fall; we just watched her. Her stillness held the fall itself. Her body, limp, and the motorcycle, splintered, lay in the intersection of Shore and St. George. Mom in the passenger seat starts crying and I run the red light so we won’t have to watch her die. Because it looks like she’ll probably die. Mom won’t stop crying, because of motorcycles, she says. “So scary” and “you’re never allowed to ride one.” John tried to teach me once. This was when they first married, when he was trying to appear more as a friend than a father. Mom was out west on business as I pushed the little green Honda around an Episcopal church parking lot. Continue reading…

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Letters to Chinese Society 1 – CPC

by Betty P

Happy Friday everyone, and a warm welcome back to spring weather! To celebrate, we give you below the first of many Open Letters to Society to come. This category will be reoccurring, and we would like to invite you to send us your own letters to chosen parts of the PR. Or simply post below in the comment section.

Shanghai, China
17 January 2010

Dear CPC,

I am under no illusion about the vast number of letters that you receive on a daily basis, but I hope very much that you deem my humble epistle worthy of contemplation.

I write to express my sincere congratulations to you and your Party and further, to proffer my encouragement in the hope that it will steel the hearts and minds of those in your ranks to pursue feats of equal greatness.

Continue reading…

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bus number fourteen

by ling’ling

As an infinite number of grapes ripen on the vine and fall at the various stages of their striving journey towards a Platonic perfection yet only one manages to fall at the precise moment of the ideal, so an angel astride a

Flying Pigeon weaves her way up Fumin Lu blissfully unaware that in her the gods have violated the contract of their non-existence in a cumulative expression of perfection to exceed even their own pedestrian fantasies.

To see her face is to know that in her the universe has suddenly, unexpectedly and with absolute finality manifested its singular purpose in the curve of her delicate figure. Every history, every art, every violence, every sex, every thought ever conceived revealed as but a gloriously blind, witless stagger towards this moment.

Continue reading…

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Office Poetry

Roses are red, working 9 to 5
when I go postal
no one will be left alive

It’s Monday morning. Your favorite part of the week. You’ve just spent a migrant workers’ fortune on trendy overpriced restaurants and more cocktails than you can remember and all you got for it was a bloody hangover and a  3am make-out at M2. Your apartment looks like a crack house for DVD and Sherpas addicts. It’s all good though, cause Super Aiyi is coming today and you know what that means: clean underwear! Yesssssss!. Continue reading…

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The Launch…

Welcome to haliterature.com

So many things can be said about what’s going on in China in 2010, and since we’ve got less than two years left before the apocalypse (2012, not the Expo…what did you think I meant?), we’d better get it all down in pixels and broadcast into outer space so that future generations will know what a charming race we were. Continue reading…

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Featured H.A.L. Artist: Greg Giegucz

Continue reading…

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Groupthink – Something Unexpected

Another Sunday another HAL Groupthink. This time the theme was Something Unexpected. Like the time you forgot to lock the door and your mom walked in on you reading the bible.

The HAL version of a Sunday afternoon watching cute babies, strange animals and gruesome accidents on Youtube.

Breakfastby Owsley Beck
Where is this going? I don’t get it what’s the poi….HOLY SHIT!!!

Manta Ray Mantraby Dena
manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray manta ray

Phone Callsby Hunter
Hunter making an horrific turn of events seem mundane and all the more terrifying with detached imagery and a sense of the inevitable. Heavy.

A Tail of the Unexpectedby Susie Gordon
If the Queen was a sexy cynical Brit in Shanghai exile she might have written this tale of expat hipster satire. Fortunately for Shanghai we don’t have a queen.  We have Susie Gordon. Long live!

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Groupthink – Harmonious society


Rest assured. We live in an harmonious society. All is peaceful and well. Thank the maker.

For those of you not fortunate enough to live in Sweden or North Korea, take comfort. HAL is there for you.

Crab’s Worldby Angel
A biting (or pinching?) allegory by HAL’s favorite pixie. The most charming English the middle kingdom has to offer and a vicious invertebrate with more bling than you’ll ever own.

The Nomadic Metropolisby H. van Blarenburg
HAL’s dystopic philosopher brings the pain in a post-apocalyptic ethereal mindfuck.

Lee, Me and the Fallacyby Dena
If the title hasn’t captured your interest perhaps you need to get your kung-fu shoes on and head down to qipu lu to get some spectacles. A cynical short by HAL’s resident Las Vegetarian sexbomb.

love letters to genghis khan by Owsley Beck
Poetry. Epic fucking poetry from the man who makes Henry the 8th look like a pussy.

House on Fire by Ginger wRong Chen
Ginger wRong. Ginger wRong. Ginger wRong. Gets it all wRight in this twisted tale of wHarmony.

cats / godsby Ling’Ling
meowtherfucker.

Chaos Withinby Björn Wahlström
A musical treatise on harmony and dissonance. Did you just feel your paradigm shift?

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Groupthink – Bedtime Stories

HAL loves the little children. Like Michael Jackson with a court-ordered chaperone.

Revenge of the Butterfly – by Ginger wRong Chen
Shanghai vixen Ginger wRong strips down to her melancholy soul in this cynical fantasy/fairy tale.

Willy and His Two Friendsby David Hampson
It’s Sunday night and the kids are ready for bed. You tuck the little angels in and sit yourself down at respectable distance that is non-intrusive and politically correct. You read them their favorite bedtime story: Willy and His Two Friends. The kids fall to sleep with visions of Bolliker and Balliker dancing through their dreams. You sick bastard. This is guaranteed to make you laugh, and if you happen to be a Limey, probably for days on end.

Left Behindby Angel
A touching short about a little angel from HAL’s own Angel as she curls up in the mind of a Chinese child. The endearing narrator longs for his parents who work to build a better future for him in distant Suzhou while Grandma and Granddad care for him. Why can’t they visit as often as the postman?

The Magic Dumplingsby Paul Kurowski
A comitragic story of Little Jin and his best friend Timmy as they eat Mr. Dingdong’s MSG laden magic dumplings, mixing humour and fantasy on a distinctly Chinese backdrop.

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Groupthink – Sci-fi

1. HAL may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.

2. HAL must obey any orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.

3. HAL must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

The Elastic Dawnby Estel Vilar
HAL newcomer of the week set out to transform the history of the universe, and decipher the will of a demiurge, the SH World Financial Center bows to the ground with the sound of a million neighing horses. Where will mankind hide from his own creation gone organic?

2288 (Chapter one)by NCF
All systems go in this teaser short featuring a post-apocalyptic Shanghai, a Fujian’ese flight mechanic and a man named Joe who doesn’t know it, but is about to save the universe.

The Sunstorm lectures: ‘On late isolation era conceptions of chance by Björn Wahlström
HAL’s’ resident intellectual force majeur derides Einstein and the very theory of quantum gravity (cue laughter).

Wormhole by Owsley Beck
Owsley and his tight crew get stuck in outer space with nothing but a faulty Omega Drive and “Whip-it-good” whipped cream.


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