A sampling of authors who have read at recent TLG Talks, listed in alphabetical order.
M.V. Lee Badgett

M. V. Lee Badgett is Professor of Economics and Director of the School of Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in the United States. She is a distinguished scholar at the Williams Institute on Sexual Orientation Law and Public Policy at UCLA’s School of Law.
Prof. Badgett's most recent book, When Gay People Get Married: What Happens When Societies Legalize Same-Sex Marriage, addresses issues in marriage debates in European countries and the United States. She drew on that work in her recent testimony in the Perry v. Schwarzenegger trial challenging California’s Proposition 8. Badgett recently directed a four-year project funded by the Ford Foundation to encourage more and better data collection on sexual orientation. Other publications include Money, Myths, and Change: The Economic Lives of Lesbians and Gay Men and the co-edited Sexual Orientation Discrimination: An International Perspective.
Prof. Badgett's most recent book, When Gay People Get Married: What Happens When Societies Legalize Same-Sex Marriage, addresses issues in marriage debates in European countries and the United States. She drew on that work in her recent testimony in the Perry v. Schwarzenegger trial challenging California’s Proposition 8. Badgett recently directed a four-year project funded by the Ford Foundation to encourage more and better data collection on sexual orientation. Other publications include Money, Myths, and Change: The Economic Lives of Lesbians and Gay Men and the co-edited Sexual Orientation Discrimination: An International Perspective.
Harper Bliss

Harper Bliss is the author of the High Rise series, the French Kissing serial and several other lesbian erotica and romance titles. She is the co-founder of Ladylit Publishing, an independent press focusing on lesbian fiction. Harper lives in Hong Kong with her wife and, regrettably, zero pets.
She can be found at harperbliss.com.
She can be found at harperbliss.com.
Ken Bridgewater

Ken Bridgewater is the author of crime thriller Open Verdict: A Hong Kong Story (Trafford Press, 2013), a fictionalized account of the suspicious death of Police Inspector John MacLennan and the ensuing court case. Bridgewater came to Hong Kong in 1973 with the British Air Force to head a team of bio-medical engineers in the then-colony’s government hospitals. His published books include Talk of Hong Kong, The Integrated Health Bible, The Ultimate Back Book, The Nutrition Bible and The Neck Connection.
Bridgewater and Open Verdict can be found at kenbridgewater.com.
Bridgewater and Open Verdict can be found at kenbridgewater.com.
Curtis Chin

Curtis Chin has written for ABC, NBC, the Disney Channel, Nickelodeon and Fox television. He has won awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts and the San Diego Asian American Film Foundation. Vincent Who?, his first documentary, has screened at almost 400 colleges in four countries and won awards from the National Association for Multicultural Education and the Asian American Justice Center. As a community activist, he co-founded the Asian American Writers Workshop and Asian Pacific Americans for Progress. He has appeared on MSNBC, CNN and NPR, and in Newsweek magazine. He is currently a Visiting Scholar at New York University.
Chin and Vincent Who? can be found at vincentwhofilm.com.
Chin and Vincent Who? can be found at vincentwhofilm.com.
Jenna Collett

Jenna Collett is a South African lecturer living and working in Hong Kong. She knows less about finance than fiction, and more about sonnets than skyscrapers, but please don’t quiz her on any of it. She has lived in South Africa, South Korea and South China, and hopes always to reside in and write from the South of Somewhere.
Nigel Collett

Nigel Collett is author of three biographies: A Death in Hong Kong: The MacLennan Case of 1980 and the Suppression of a Scandal (CityU HK Press, 2018), Firelight of a Different Colour: The Life and Times of Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing (Signal 8 Press, 2014) and the definitive biography on the brigadier-general who perpetrated the Jallianwala Bagh massacre in 1919 India: The Butcher of Amritsar: General Reginald Dyer (Bloomsbury Academic, 2006).
He is currently working on a fourth biography exploring the life of E.M. Forster, provisionally titled Developing the Heart.
Collett is a former lieutenant-colonel in the British forces in Hong Kong and Brunei and a thirty-year Hong Kong resident. He earned his bachelor of arts in modern history at St Peter’s College, Oxford and a master of arts in biography from the University of Buckingham.
He writes for the Asian Review of Books and his columns have appeared in China Daily and Fridae.asia. He co-founded the TLG.
Collett can be found at nigelcollett.me.
Collett reviews The Boys in the Band (Netflix, 2020):
Andrew Ashley talks with Nigel Collett: A Death in Hong Kong
He is currently working on a fourth biography exploring the life of E.M. Forster, provisionally titled Developing the Heart.
Collett is a former lieutenant-colonel in the British forces in Hong Kong and Brunei and a thirty-year Hong Kong resident. He earned his bachelor of arts in modern history at St Peter’s College, Oxford and a master of arts in biography from the University of Buckingham.
He writes for the Asian Review of Books and his columns have appeared in China Daily and Fridae.asia. He co-founded the TLG.
Collett can be found at nigelcollett.me.
Collett reviews The Boys in the Band (Netflix, 2020):
Andrew Ashley talks with Nigel Collett: A Death in Hong Kong
Ansh Das

Ansh Das – or AD – is a self-described IT nerd in the morning, an author by noon, an activist in the evening and a healer by night. That sequence may change a few times in any direction during the course of the day. Why run with the herd when one can fly? #EvilGenius
AD can be found at anshdas.com, on Facebook, on Twitter and on Instagram.
AD can be found at anshdas.com, on Facebook, on Twitter and on Instagram.
Edward Gunawan

Edward Gunawan is the writer of mental health webcomic Press Play and lead organizer of Project: Press Play, an online community promoting mental well-being. As a multi-disciplinary storyteller, he has written, produced, directed and acted in more than 50 award-winning creative projects.
Find his work at addword.com.
Find his work at addword.com.
JiaJia

Henry Lam, who writes under the pen name JiaJia, is a novelist, playwright and producer. Author of the novel Running Shoes, Running Track, Lam has a long history of contribution to the LGBT community. He was co-founder and Programme Director of Gay Radio Hong Kong and is well known for his creation of the first Hong Kong LGBT video drama 99 Days. Lam is also the co-founder of Primaco Productions, a non-profit organization promoting sexual diversity and equality to the general public with an artistic approach. The documentary Different Path, Same Way was the first project that explored same-sex marriage and the importance of a couple’s family bonding. To advocate marriage equality in Hong Kong, Lam and his husband Guy Ho co-presented in TEDxKowloon Annual Conference in December 2013 and co-found the group Double Happiness(虹雙囍)in March 2014. They are currently co-writing a column on married life for House News. His second book, Cross Tracks, is the sequel to Running Shoes, Running Track, from which a feature film is being adapted and produced.
Lucetta Yip Lo Kam

Dr Lucetta Yip Lo Kam is an assistant professor at the Department of Humanities and Creative Writing, Hong Kong Baptist University. She is the author of Shanghai Lalas: Female Tongzhi Communities and Politics in Urban China, in English (Hong Kong University Press, 2013), and the editor of Lunar Desires: Her First Same-Sex Love in Her Own Words (《月亮的騷動-她她的初戀故事:我們的自述》), in Chinese (Cultural Act Up / Step Forward, 2001). She specializes in Chinese gender and sexuality studies.
Travis Kong

Dr Travis Kong is Associate Professor in Sociology at The University of Hong Kong and author of Oral History of Older Gay Men in Hong Kong published in Chinese: 男男正傳:香港年長男同志口述史 (Stepforward Multimedia Co Ltd., 2014).
Kong researches homosexuality, commercial sex and intimate cultures in Hong Kong and mainland China. His publications have appeared in numerous journals, books and encyclopedias. He is the author of Chinese Male Homosexualities: Memba, Tongzhi and Golden Boy (Routledge, 2011) and co-editor of Sexualities: Studies in Culture and Society, one of the leading international journals in the field of sexuality. He is the recipient of 2014 Prism Award of Hong Kong Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.
Kong researches homosexuality, commercial sex and intimate cultures in Hong Kong and mainland China. His publications have appeared in numerous journals, books and encyclopedias. He is the author of Chinese Male Homosexualities: Memba, Tongzhi and Golden Boy (Routledge, 2011) and co-editor of Sexualities: Studies in Culture and Society, one of the leading international journals in the field of sexuality. He is the recipient of 2014 Prism Award of Hong Kong Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.
Brian Leung

Brian Leung (梁兆輝) is a veteran broadcaster in Hong Kong, hosting the first and only Chinese LGBT radio programme “We Are Family” (自己人) on RTHK Radio 2. The show has been lauded, recently receiving the Annual Human Rights Press Award. A long-time LGBT advocate, Leung is currently chief campaigner of BigLove Alliance, an LGBT NGO founded in 2013 by pop stars Anthony Wong and Denise Ho, together with Legislators Cyd Ho and Raymond Chan. Leung is also the event director of Pink Dot Hong Kong, the biggest local LGBT event, begun in 2014. He serves as AIDS Concern Ambassador for the promotion of safe sex and regular HIV testing. Straightly-Gay (2009) is Leung’s first book on LGBT culture.
Henry W. Leung

Henry W. Leung’s work includes a study concluded while in the SAR as a Fulbright scholar entitled City Without Solitude, reflecting on the literatures and protests in Hong Kong and examining imperial prejudice, confinement and the nature of imagination.
Leung has received Kundiman and Soros Fellowships. He earned his BA at Stanford University while also studying abroad at Peking, Cambridge and Oxford universities, and earned his MFA at the University of Michigan. He has spoken and guest-lectured at Hong Kong University, Baptist University and City University.
Leung has received Kundiman and Soros Fellowships. He earned his BA at Stanford University while also studying abroad at Peking, Cambridge and Oxford universities, and earned his MFA at the University of Michigan. He has spoken and guest-lectured at Hong Kong University, Baptist University and City University.
Tony Zhiyang Lin

Tony Zhiyang Lin (林知陽) is an author, lyricist and independent documentarist based in New York. Born in Beijing, Lin moved to Hong Kong at eighteen. He has studied, worked and travelled to more than twenty countries across Asia, Europe and North America, feeding his creativity. The journeys of his exotic encounters laced with culture shock are documented in his award-nominated book in Chinese: 這顆行星上所有的酒館 (All the Bars on This Planet).
He is a runner-up for the City Literary Award given annually by City University of Hong Kong and recipient of the Audience’s Choice at the Shanghai Pride Film Festival Award for his short film “A City of Two Tales” (《雙城記》).
Lin can be found at [email protected] and on Facebook.
He is a runner-up for the City Literary Award given annually by City University of Hong Kong and recipient of the Audience’s Choice at the Shanghai Pride Film Festival Award for his short film “A City of Two Tales” (《雙城記》).
Lin can be found at [email protected] and on Facebook.
Eric Lowe

Eric Lowe began writing professionally alongside his finance career covering crowned heads for UK-based Royalty Digest magazine. This foray into the world of history, politics and journalism led him to give up his career in finance to publish two photo collections: Royalty in Photographs (Forecast, 2003) and Royal Images (Sino Sky, 2006). Lowe has also written for newspapers and magazines in Hong Kong including South China Morning Post, Hong Kong Tatler and Air China magazine. While based in Washington, DC, he weighed in on China-U.S. relations for Fair Observer online magazine.
A San Francisco native who grew up in Hong Kong, Lowe returned to the SAR in 2014 and began to research the life of Yoshiko Yamaguchi, also known as Li Xiang Lan. This work was published in 2015.
A San Francisco native who grew up in Hong Kong, Lowe returned to the SAR in 2014 and began to research the life of Yoshiko Yamaguchi, also known as Li Xiang Lan. This work was published in 2015.
Michael Luongo

Michael Luongo is Writer-in-Residence at the Lingnan University English Department. The award-winning writer reports on tourism redevelopment in conflict zones, as well as other subjects. His work has appeared in The New York Times, Bloomberg News and Gay City News. He has taught at New York University, and at the University of Michigan in the United States and Shanghai. Luongo is author or editor of sixteen books, including a sex research-themed novel, The Voyeur (Alyson Books).
Luongo pioneered academic research on gay tourism in the 1990s and has reported on 100 countries across the seven continents. His best-known LGBT travel book is Gay Travels in the Muslim World (Routledge), the first gay American-published book translated into Arabic. He was a Lambda Book Award finalist for the collection Sensual Travels (Bruno Gmuender). He is also a freelance journalist and was named 2013 Journalist of the Year for NLGJA, the American National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, among other awards.
Luongo can be found at michaelluongo.com and tweets @michaelluongo.
Luongo pioneered academic research on gay tourism in the 1990s and has reported on 100 countries across the seven continents. His best-known LGBT travel book is Gay Travels in the Muslim World (Routledge), the first gay American-published book translated into Arabic. He was a Lambda Book Award finalist for the collection Sensual Travels (Bruno Gmuender). He is also a freelance journalist and was named 2013 Journalist of the Year for NLGJA, the American National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, among other awards.
Luongo can be found at michaelluongo.com and tweets @michaelluongo.
Marshall Moore

Marshall Moore is the author of several works of fiction, including the short story collections A Garden Fed by Lightning (Signal 8 Press, 2016), The Infernal Republic (Signal 8 Press, 2012) and Black Shapes in a Darkened Room (Suspect Thoughts Press, 2004) and the novels Bitter Orange (Signal 8 Press, 2013) and The Concrete Sky (Typhoon Media, 2010).
With Xu Xi, he is the co-editor of the anthology The Queen of Statue Square: New Short Fiction from Hong Kong (CCCP, 2014). He recently completed a PhD in Creative Writing from Aberystwyth University in Wales. A native of North Carolina in the United States, he lives and works in Hong Kong.
For more information, visit marshallmoore.com.
With Xu Xi, he is the co-editor of the anthology The Queen of Statue Square: New Short Fiction from Hong Kong (CCCP, 2014). He recently completed a PhD in Creative Writing from Aberystwyth University in Wales. A native of North Carolina in the United States, he lives and works in Hong Kong.
For more information, visit marshallmoore.com.
Michael Mosettig

Michael Mosettig is a two-time Emmy award winner, international journalist, university professor and public speaker on the media and international affairs.
He is a lecturer and writer–blogger for "The Online NewsHour" and an adjunct professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC. Mosettig has served as senior producer for foreign affairs and defense at "PBS NewsHour". Before joining the programme in 1983, he was a producer for NBC News and European correspondent for UPI.
Mosettig has taught media and international relations at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism in New York. He has lectured at the Kennedy School at Harvard, West Point and other universities including Georgetown, from which he received an MA in European Diplomatic History. In 2013, he was a Senior Visiting Lecturer at Hong Kong Baptist University.
He is a lecturer and writer–blogger for "The Online NewsHour" and an adjunct professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC. Mosettig has served as senior producer for foreign affairs and defense at "PBS NewsHour". Before joining the programme in 1983, he was a producer for NBC News and European correspondent for UPI.
Mosettig has taught media and international relations at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism in New York. He has lectured at the Kennedy School at Harvard, West Point and other universities including Georgetown, from which he received an MA in European Diplomatic History. In 2013, he was a Senior Visiting Lecturer at Hong Kong Baptist University.
Peter Moss

Born into an Anglo-Indian railway community in 1935, Peter Moss left India shortly before Independence in 1947 and spent the next decade furthering his English education and acquiring a foundation in journalism. Travelling by bus from London to Delhi, by train to Calcutta and by ship to Penang, he arrived in Malaya just after that country gained its own freedom in 1957. There he witnessed and wrote about the closing years of the Malayan Emergency. In 1965 he moved to Hong Kong, where he spent the next 30 years in the colonial administration. For 14 of those years he was in charge of the publicity division of the government's information services, engineering social changes through community education, for which he was awarded an M.B.E.
Moss died in Manila at age 84 in 2019.
Moss died in Manila at age 84 in 2019.
David Clive Price

David Clive Price has been at various times a wine and olive farmer in Italy, a Renaissance scholar, speechwriter for one of the world’s leading banks, a strategic adviser to Asian multinationals and an explorer of the unknown corners of South Korea, Japan, China, the Philippines, Taiwan and Myanmar (Burma), to name just a few of his “unexplored territories”.
He has written books on the “lost civilization” of rural Italy, music and Catholic conspiracies in Elizabeth I’s England, Buddhism in the daily life of Asia, the secret world of China’s Forbidden City, the darker corners of corporate life in pre-recession London and Hong Kong, off-the-beaten track Seoul and South Korea, and the ethnic sub-culture and risky underworld of 1980s New York.
Price can be found at davidcliveprice.com and find his blog here.
He has written books on the “lost civilization” of rural Italy, music and Catholic conspiracies in Elizabeth I’s England, Buddhism in the daily life of Asia, the secret world of China’s Forbidden City, the darker corners of corporate life in pre-recession London and Hong Kong, off-the-beaten track Seoul and South Korea, and the ethnic sub-culture and risky underworld of 1980s New York.
Price can be found at davidcliveprice.com and find his blog here.
Edmund Price

Edmund Price is an award-winning writer whose work has been published in Singapore, Japan and Hong Kong and his flash fiction has been performed live. The longtime Hong Kong resident has edited three short story collections for the Hong Kong Writers Circle.
A former investment banker from the United Kingdom, Price has an MFA in Creative Writing from City University of Hong Kong and later in 2017 will begin a PhD in Creative Writing at Lancaster University in England. His focus is speculative fiction, but he writes widely and LGBT topics and themes frequently form a core component of his work.
Price's work can be found on Amazon.
A former investment banker from the United Kingdom, Price has an MFA in Creative Writing from City University of Hong Kong and later in 2017 will begin a PhD in Creative Writing at Lancaster University in England. His focus is speculative fiction, but he writes widely and LGBT topics and themes frequently form a core component of his work.
Price's work can be found on Amazon.
Lee Harlem Robinson

Lee Harlem Robinson is a fictional character created for the blog “Trying to Throw My Arms Around the World”. In daily posts, Robinson narrates the story of how she ended up in Hong Kong. Come and Go, Robinson’s first novel, picks up where “Trying to Throw my Arms Around the World” ends and describes her dramatic adventures in romance in “that other city that never sleeps”.
More on Robinson at www.leeharlemrobinson.com.
More on Robinson at www.leeharlemrobinson.com.
Gregg Schroeder

Gregg Schroeder is a writer and editor. He has co-edited print and online journals and anthologies, including Afterness: Literature from the New Transnational Asia (After-Party Press, 2016), and his creative work has appeared in The New Guard and Blood and Thunder. Schroeder earned his MFA in fiction from City University of Hong Kong.
Most recently, he co-edited Intimate Strangers: True Stories from Queer Asia (Signal 8 Press, 2019) with Carmen Ho.
Most recently, he co-edited Intimate Strangers: True Stories from Queer Asia (Signal 8 Press, 2019) with Carmen Ho.
Beatrice Wong

Beatrice Wong is a self-described transgender outsider artist with a lifelong struggle with mental issues. She expresses her dilemmas in life through personal creative projects, having contributed to the LGBTQ+ anthology Intimate Strangers: True Stories from Queer Asia, directed a short documentary Goodbye Mr B, Hello Miss B!which has been screened in various cities, and recently, photography, with her WMA Masters finalist work No Opportunities (for Beatrice) being exhibited at the Hong Kong City Hall. Beatrice also DJ as Misty Penguin, her latest gig being the Hong Kong Videotage X Videoclub UK BSN#5 exchange project closing party. Her recent short film My Room 37will be a screened in the Scottish Queer International Film Festival (SQIFF).
Nicholas YB Wong

Nicholas YB Wong’s latest collection, Crevasse (Kaya Press, 2015), is the winner of the Lambda Literary Award for gay poetry. He is a finalist of New Letters Poetry Award, Wabash Prize for Poetry, and recently, the poetry contests of Tupelo Quarterly and Better: Culture and Lit. Wong is on the faculty of The Education University of Hong Kong.
Peter Wood

Peter Wood is a Chinese national who has called Hong Kong home for the past two decades. The native of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Southern Africa joined the army, then wound up in London, where he began a successful career in photography. Wood’s unique upbringing, as well as his identification as a gay white African, inspired him to write his memoir, Mud Between Your Toes: A Rhodesian Farm.
Peter Wood and his book can be found on Facebook.
Andrew Ashley talks with Peter Wood: Mud Between Your Toes
Peter Wood and his book can be found on Facebook.
Andrew Ashley talks with Peter Wood: Mud Between Your Toes
Simon Wu

Simon Wu is a playwright whose works have been performed in Hong Kong and London. In Hong Kong, by major theatre groups including The Hong Kong Repertory Theatre and Seals Players. In London, at Soho Theatre, Greenwich Theatre, Oval House and Tara Arts. He has also been a Royal Court writer. His play has been published by Oberon Books. Three of his co-written radio plays have been broadcast on the BBC World Service. His short film, Merry-Go-Round, was nominated for Best Local Film in the Wood Green Independent Short Film Festival and screened at the British Film Institute in London. His work has also appeared in Intimate Strangers: True Stories from Queer Asia (Signal 8 Press, 2019).
Wu's forthcoming radio play, The Disappearance of Mr. Chan, will be broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in February 2020.
Xu Xi

Xu Xi 許素細 is the author of ten books, including the novel That Man In Our Lives (C&R Press, 2016) and Interruptions (HKU Museum & Art Gallery, 2016), an ekphrastic essay collection in conversation with photography by David Clarke; a memoir, An Elegy for HK (Penguin China/Australia, 2017); and Insignificance: Stories of Hong Kong (Signal 8 Press, 2018). She is the co-founder, along with Robin Hemley, of Authors at Large www.aalauthors.com, offering international writing retreats and workshops. A Chinese-Indonesian Hong Kong native and U.S. citizen, she currently lives between New York and Hong Kong.
Xu Xi can be found at www.xuxiwriter.com.
Xu Xi can be found at www.xuxiwriter.com.
Brian Yeung

Brian Yeung is an independent contributor with focus on Eurasia. He has covered mega events including the milestone agreement of the Eurasian Economic Union meeting in Astana, Kazakhstan; the 2014 Winter Olympics; Biennale des Antiquaires in Paris; and the inaugural China-Russia Expo in Harbin, China.
He writes for more than ten Chinese, English and Russian media organizations including Yazhou Zhoukan, South China Morning Post, The Moscow Times, Macao magazine, Asia Gambling Brief and slon.ru. Prior to his editorial career, Yueng was with The Economist Group. He organized the company’s first global event, the World Oceans Summit in Singapore and became the company’s first social and digital media executive in Asia.
Yeung’s writing portfolio is available at brianyeung.pressfolios.com.
He writes for more than ten Chinese, English and Russian media organizations including Yazhou Zhoukan, South China Morning Post, The Moscow Times, Macao magazine, Asia Gambling Brief and slon.ru. Prior to his editorial career, Yueng was with The Economist Group. He organized the company’s first global event, the World Oceans Summit in Singapore and became the company’s first social and digital media executive in Asia.
Yeung’s writing portfolio is available at brianyeung.pressfolios.com.
Ray Yeung

Ray Yeung is a Columbia University MFA graduate. He has chaired the Hong Kong Lesbian and Gay Film Festival since 2000. His first feature film, Cut Sleeve Boys, premiered at the Rotterdam International Film Festival and won Best Feature at the Outfest Fusion Festival in Los Angeles. It was released in Thailand, Taiwan and the United States.
Yeung has written and directed eight short films. Yellow Fever won Best Short at the Madrid Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. A Bridge to the Past was commissioned by the London Arts Council and Paper Wrap Fire won Best Short at the New Hampshire Film Festival. Yeung has also directed plays staged in London and Hong Kong. As director and art director for television commercials, he has worked for clients including 7-Eleven, Coca-Cola, McDonald’s and HSBC.
Yeung has written and directed eight short films. Yellow Fever won Best Short at the Madrid Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. A Bridge to the Past was commissioned by the London Arts Council and Paper Wrap Fire won Best Short at the New Hampshire Film Festival. Yeung has also directed plays staged in London and Hong Kong. As director and art director for television commercials, he has worked for clients including 7-Eleven, Coca-Cola, McDonald’s and HSBC.
Norm Yip

Photographer Norm Yip moved to Hong Kong from his native Canada in 1994 to work in architecture before pursuing photography and art. Yip’s paintings, graphite drawings and photographs have been showcased at numerous exhibitions and his photographic images of Asian men have appeared in a variety of publications, most recently The Romantic Male Nude by James Spada (Harry N. Abrams, 2007) and The Best of International Nudes Photography III (Feierabend Unique Books, 2007). Yip’s clients include The Hong Kong Trade Development Council for which he photographed the 2013 Hong Kong Dance Festival, Arena Swimwear 2013 Campaign (Asia) and The Art Newspaper for Art Basel Hong Kong in 2013 and 2014. Yip has photographed celebrities including director Zhang Yimou and performing artists Ricky Martin, Jennifer Lopez, Jamiroquai and Rain.
His latest book of photography is The Asian Male - 3.AM, part of The Asian Male series. More on Yip can be found at normyip.com.
His latest book of photography is The Asian Male - 3.AM, part of The Asian Male series. More on Yip can be found at normyip.com.
Not all those noted above are LGBTIQ themselves.
Their inclusion in TLG programmes indicates that their work is of tongzhi interest.
Their inclusion in TLG programmes indicates that their work is of tongzhi interest.