I have published two critically acclaimed novels, with a third out in 2025. My debut Dark Chapter (2017) won The Guardian’s Not The Booker Prize and was nominated for an Edgar Award. I recently adapted it for the screen, funded by Northern Ireland Screen and the British Film Institute, and the book will be re-issued in a new edition in 2025.
My second novel Complicit (2022) was a New York Times Editors’ Choice and shortlisted for the Royal Society of Literature's Encore Award. My third novel, What We Left Unsaid, will be published in August 2025. In total, my novels have been translated into twelve different languages, and I have spoken about them at The Hay Festival, Edinburgh Book Festival, The Houses of Parliament, etc. and as far afield as South Africa, South Korea, Iceland, and California.
I am Chinese-American (originally from New Jersey), but have lived and worked abroad for twenty-five years. Travel remains a keen interest of mine, both personally and intellectually, and my writing often explores themes of displacement and belonging, trauma, the media, cross-cultural encounters, and social inequalities.
Before becoming a novelist, I worked in the film industry for ten years. As a producer and script editor for a London-based independent film production company, I worked on six feature films featuring A-list talent, and two shorts: Cashback (2004) which was Oscar-nominated, and Vagabond Shoes (2006) which was Oscar-shortlisted. Later, I programmed for the Doha Tribeca Film Festival in Qatar.
My film producing career came to a sudden halt when I was violently assaulted and raped by a stranger in 2008, and my subsequent work has often focused on changing the public narrative around sexual violence to reflect a survivor’s perspective. This ultimately drove me to write Dark Chapter and pursue my own creative writing.
My essays have appeared in The Guardian, LitHub, CrimeReads, Wasafiri, BBC Radio 4, Bustle, Sight & Sound, Electric Literature, and elsewhere. I’ve received grants from the Royal Society of Literature, Jerwood Arts, and the Arts Councils of England and Northern Ireland for my literary projects. I am very involved in curating and chairing panels and author talks, which began with founding the Clear Lines Festival in 2015, the UK’s first-ever festival addressing sexual assault and consent through the arts and discussion. I’m accustomed to working with the media, and have appeared on the BBC, Sky News, Channel 4, BBC Woman’s Hour, The Guardian, The Times, The Irish Times, TEDx London, among other outlets.
Prior to my post at the University of Birmingham, I taught at Goldsmiths, the LSE, and for organisations like the Arvon Foundation, The Literary Consultancy, Writing on the Wall, and Spread the Word. I hold an honorary doctorate of law from the National University of Ireland, in recognition of my writing and activism.