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They were both couriers. One wrote a bestselling book, the other made a film

I Deliver Parcels in Beijing author Hu Anyan and videographer Kong Yiu-wing talk about making art out of hard, blue-collar labour

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I Deliver Parcels in Beijing author Hu Anyan (left) and Hong Kong food delivery driver and filmmaker Kong Yiu-wing meet in Hong Kong before Hu’s speech at the 2026 Hong Kong International Literary Festival. Photo: Jonathan Wong
Karen Cheung

What happens when the author of a bestselling memoir about working as a courier in mainland China, and a Hong Kong videographer who moonlights as a food delivery rider, meet?

They do not immediately launch into a philosophical discussion about art and labour. Instead, they compare different vehicles’ battery lifespans, the daily distances they travel, and the risk of traffic accidents on the job.

“It’s very common in [mainland] China,” Hu Anyan says. “And especially so with food delivery, because you’re always in a rush.”
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Ahead of his appearance at the Hong Kong International Literary Festival in March, Hu, author of I Deliver Parcels in Beijing, sat down for a conversation in his native Cantonese with videographer Kong Yiu-wing and the South China Morning Post.

(From left) Kong Yiu-wing, the SCMP’s Karen Cheung and Hu Anyan chat at the SCMP’s offices in Times Square, Hong Kong. Photo: Jonathan Wong
(From left) Kong Yiu-wing, the SCMP’s Karen Cheung and Hu Anyan chat at the SCMP’s offices in Times Square, Hong Kong. Photo: Jonathan Wong

Meeting for the first time, Hu and Kong discussed their respective experiences as artist-labourers who draw on their jobs for their artistic practices.

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