Muse began publishing books under its imprint in April 2011, with
Once A Hero: The Vanishing Hong Kong Cinema a book on Hong Kong film by Perry Lam. An expert in cinema and in cultural criticism, Lam had been editorial director of
Muse magazine from 2007 to 2010 before becoming assistant editorial director of Oxford University Press. Another notable book from 2011 was
Musings: Reading Hong Kong, China and the World a collection of essays by renowned Harvard and Chinese University of Hong Kong scholar
Leo Lee Ou-fan. A review by Louis Lee in the South China Morning Post described
Musings as: “engagingly written …offers not only a self-proclaimed Chinese cosmopolitan’s view on contemporary local and world literature, but also insights into the cultural and literary scene …of interest to readers worldwide who want to understand Hong Kong culture.” The book was also reviewed in major Chinese-language media including 亞洲週刊. In 2014, Muse published
Snow and Shadow, the first full-length English book by award-winning Hong Kong author
Dorothy Tse. A collection of short stories from her earlier Chinese books as well as previously unpublished works,
Snow and Shadow was translated by Nicky Harman. Tse's book was the first of a series of translated works by Hong Kong writers published by Muse, which includes
Hon Lai-chu and Dung Kai-cheung.
Muse has also participated in a long-term partnership with the
Hong Kong Arts Festival to develop books presenting bilingual versions of plays commissioned by the Festival during 2011 to 2014. The books included both printed books and e-books. The bilingual series,
New Plays Selection includes newly commissioned theatre works by Yan Yu, Harriet Chung Yin-sze, Poon Chan-leung, Wong Wing-sze, Poon Wai-sum, Santayana Li Wing-lui and Chong Mui-ngam. Particularly notable is Chong's play,
Murder in San Jose, because it won the Best Script Award from the Hong Kong Federation of Drama Societies and because the English translation is adapted by
David Henry Hwang, the award-winning US playwright. ==External links==