A fresh and vivid new voice brings a contemporary edge to the classic espionage novel.
A New York Times "Best Thrillers of the Year (So Far)"
At twenty-six, Princeton grad Michael Wang is trapped. Stifled under the bamboo ceiling at General Motors, hes working quietly on a breakthrough in self-driving car technology that he hopes will catapult him out of obscurity. Disaffected and largely friendless in San Francisco, hes dogged by resentment towards the Ivy Leaguers who never accepted him and his colleagues at GM who see him as passive and faceless.
But all that changes when one night, on a freelance coding platform, he meets the beautiful and enigmatic Vivian. Shes been admiring Michaels work from afar and represents a rival Beijing tech company thats eager to poach him as a newly minted executive, liberate his ideas from the stagnant confines of GM, and help him find success in the wilder, less regulated business environs of China.
For Michaelalienated and underappreciatedits no choice at all. But as soon as Michael arrives in Beijing, Vivian vanishes. When the true nature of his new position is made clear, Michael finds himself enmeshed in a dangerous web of industrial espionage and counterintelligence. Caught between two countries that view him as a pawn, where do his loyalties lie?
Piercingly intelligent and ruthlessly contemporary, The Expat is both a white-knuckle spy novel and a thrilling exploration of the myth of meritocracy, high-tech immigration, U.S.-China conflicts, identity, and disaffection that asks: in the pursuit of self-actualization, who will we betray and how far will we go?
Genre: Thriller
A New York Times "Best Thrillers of the Year (So Far)"
At twenty-six, Princeton grad Michael Wang is trapped. Stifled under the bamboo ceiling at General Motors, hes working quietly on a breakthrough in self-driving car technology that he hopes will catapult him out of obscurity. Disaffected and largely friendless in San Francisco, hes dogged by resentment towards the Ivy Leaguers who never accepted him and his colleagues at GM who see him as passive and faceless.
But all that changes when one night, on a freelance coding platform, he meets the beautiful and enigmatic Vivian. Shes been admiring Michaels work from afar and represents a rival Beijing tech company thats eager to poach him as a newly minted executive, liberate his ideas from the stagnant confines of GM, and help him find success in the wilder, less regulated business environs of China.
For Michaelalienated and underappreciatedits no choice at all. But as soon as Michael arrives in Beijing, Vivian vanishes. When the true nature of his new position is made clear, Michael finds himself enmeshed in a dangerous web of industrial espionage and counterintelligence. Caught between two countries that view him as a pawn, where do his loyalties lie?
Piercingly intelligent and ruthlessly contemporary, The Expat is both a white-knuckle spy novel and a thrilling exploration of the myth of meritocracy, high-tech immigration, U.S.-China conflicts, identity, and disaffection that asks: in the pursuit of self-actualization, who will we betray and how far will we go?
Genre: Thriller
Praise for this book
"Relentlessly intelligent and global in scope, The Expat has the electric hum of a long spring stretched tight. The concerns--authentic existence in a hyperreal economy and physical survival--put Hansen Shi in the company of Tom McCarthy and Nick Harkaway. Thrillingly ambitious!" - Will Chancellor
"In the complex figure of Michael Wang, Hansen Shi has found a character embodying major concerns of the 21st century, from the challenges of class injustice to the rapaciousness of corporations, from the dizzyingly rapid rise of China to the tightening grip of technology on modern life. Calling to mind Grahame Greene and John le Carre's later work, this riveting spy yarn deftly examines the interplay of political history and inter-generational trauma and humiliation. A magnificent debut." - Zia Haider Rahman
"The Expat is, for starters, a first-rate novel of modern spycraft, complete with honeypots, dark web recruiters, triple agents, and international proxy wars. But it's also a brilliant novel about a certain brand of Asian-American thwartedness--how the thirst for recognition can make you vulnerable to your own self-mythology, and how people who are denied visibility may exploit their invisibility. Like a Tesla, The Expat is sleek, fast, and unexpectedly deadly, and Hansen Shi's talent is so giant that it's a bit suspicious... I wonder who he's working for?" - Tony Tulathimutte
"Hansen Shi's debut uses a taut, piercingly of-the-moment spy story as a staging area for a beautifully layered, bitingly funny exploration of identity, the legacies of trauma and alienation, and the way that nations and the clashes between them can consume and co-opt every corner of a life. THE EXPAT is pure espionage pleasure but also an enthralling dispatch from a world scarred by seething, barely submerged conflicts, both ideological and personal. A triumphant first novel." - Paul Yoon
"In the complex figure of Michael Wang, Hansen Shi has found a character embodying major concerns of the 21st century, from the challenges of class injustice to the rapaciousness of corporations, from the dizzyingly rapid rise of China to the tightening grip of technology on modern life. Calling to mind Grahame Greene and John le Carre's later work, this riveting spy yarn deftly examines the interplay of political history and inter-generational trauma and humiliation. A magnificent debut." - Zia Haider Rahman
"The Expat is, for starters, a first-rate novel of modern spycraft, complete with honeypots, dark web recruiters, triple agents, and international proxy wars. But it's also a brilliant novel about a certain brand of Asian-American thwartedness--how the thirst for recognition can make you vulnerable to your own self-mythology, and how people who are denied visibility may exploit their invisibility. Like a Tesla, The Expat is sleek, fast, and unexpectedly deadly, and Hansen Shi's talent is so giant that it's a bit suspicious... I wonder who he's working for?" - Tony Tulathimutte
"Hansen Shi's debut uses a taut, piercingly of-the-moment spy story as a staging area for a beautifully layered, bitingly funny exploration of identity, the legacies of trauma and alienation, and the way that nations and the clashes between them can consume and co-opt every corner of a life. THE EXPAT is pure espionage pleasure but also an enthralling dispatch from a world scarred by seething, barely submerged conflicts, both ideological and personal. A triumphant first novel." - Paul Yoon
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