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How Hong Kong independent bookstores are in flux amid closures – but it’s not all doom and gloom

  • Recent months have seen well-known independent bookstores close in Hong Kong after they were suspected of breaking various laws
  • New bookstores exhibiting novel business models are emerging, including one that recently opened in a wet market

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Mount Zero (on right) in Sheung Wan, which will close at the end of March. The independent bookstore is not the only one in Hong Kong to have recently closed or announced they will close. Others, though, have opened. Photo: Instagram/@mountzerobooks

The Year of the Dragon has just begun and, for most, promises a new start. For some of Hong Kong’s best-known independent bookshops, however, the last few months have seen things reach an end.

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Hillway Culture in Mong Kong closed at the end of December. Mount Zero in Sheung Wan announced it would close at the end of March. Prejudice Bookstore, which had been accused of breaching its lease agreement at the Kwun Tong factory building in which it was tucked away, closed at the end of January, but has been able to relocate nearby.

For all three, the main challenge has not been not poor sales, but operational difficulties that reflect a difficult environment for independent bookshops in Hong Kong.

Hillway Culture opened in 2020 as an extension of publishing house Hillway Press, co-founded in 2016 by former liberal studies teacher Raymond Yeung Tsz-chun.
Hillway Culture in Mong Kok, before it closed. Photo: Instagram / @hillway.culture
Hillway Culture in Mong Kok, before it closed. Photo: Instagram / @hillway.culture

In July 2021, Hillway Press received complaints from the Hong Kong Trade Development Council that some of the titles it was selling at the Hong Kong Book Fair might be in breach of the city’s National Security Law, which Beijing passed in 2020 after widespread anti-government protests that were sparked by proposed changes to Hong Kong’s extradition law.

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The following year, it was disqualified from taking part in the book fair. Instead Hillway Press organised its own fair, involving 14 other independent publishers and bookstores. However, the venue’s landlord terminated its tenancy agreement for the event’s premises in Causeway Bay a day before the fair was due to begin.
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