The Chills at Will Podcast podcast

Episode 326 with Yiming Ma, Author of These Memories Do Not Belong to Us, and Reflective, Skilled Worldbuilder and Craftsman of "Constellation Writing"

0:00
1:20:40
15 Sekunden vorwärts
15 Sekunden vorwärts

Notes and Links to Yiming Ma’s Work

 

   Born in Shanghai, Yiming Ma spent a decade in tech and finance before writing the dystopian novel These Memories Do Not Belong to Us, named a Spotify Editors' Pick, longlisted for the Goodreads Choice Award, and featured on Best Book of 2025 lists by Electric Literature, Debutiful, PEN America,and elsewhere.

   Yiming attended Stanford for his MBA, and Warren Wilson for his MFA. His stories and essays appear in the New York Times, The Guardian, The Globe and Mail, Florida Review, and elsewhere. His story “Swimmer of Yangtze” won the 2018 Guardian 4th Estate Story Prize.

Buy These Memories Do Not Belong to Us

 

Locus Magazine Review of These Memories Don't Belong to Us  

 

Yiming Ma's Website

 

Interview with Michael Zapata for Chicago Review of Books: “Mirrors, Memories, Rebellions: An Interview with Yiming Ma”

At about 2:10, Yiming shares the feedback he’s gotten and the ways in which These Memories Do Not Belong to Us has “resonated” with readers

At about 4:20, Yiming talks about his relationship with “home” and reading as a kid

At about 5:15, Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go is highlighted as a formative and transformative read for Yiming

At about 8:15, Yiming expands on how his immigrant background informed his career choices, agency, and adaptive skills and outlook on capitalism-he connects these to his book’s plot and themes 

At about 10:25, Pete reflects on the book as science fiction/speculative fiction

At about 11:25, Yiming responds to Pete’s question about contemporary books that “flipped the switch”

At about 12:50, Yiming reflects on the dearth of fiction read by people in his former work life, as well as ideas of empathy and the changing landscape of diversity in authorship

At about 15:00, Yiming talks about AI and men reading (or not reading) fiction, and differences between his writer friends and tech friends 

At about 18:00, Yiming describes the structure of the book in conjunction with seeds for the book, largely coming from the pandemic and ideas of what is remembered and not remembered and how

At about 21:55, Yiming explains how his award-winning story “Swimmer of Yangtze” and the idea of “constellation writing”

At about 23:00, Yiming lays out the book’s opening/exposition 

At about 24:40, Yiming responds to Pete’s questions about early connections and memories between Jill and Hao

At about 28:00, Yiming recalls the early question about seeds for the book in reflecting on the motif of watches in the novel 

At about 30:15, the two discuss “Easter eggs” in the book regarding “Ri-Ben” (China in Japanese), and Pete reflects on geopolitical tragedies that frame the “constellation writing” 

At about 32:10, Pete asks Yiming about the book’s “Memory Epics” and ideas of art vs. commercialism and censorship in connection to today’s similarities 

At about 36:40, Yiming expands on the story “Chankonabe” and its connections to real-life and its fit in the novel’s “constellation”

At about 37:35, Yiming talks about the importance of mantras in his book as guides for his storytelling

At about 40:00, Yiming talks about research on sumo wrestling and the resulting questions and reflection that brought out some profound scenes 

At about 43:15, The two discuss the book’s first-person accounts from the main narrator, and Yiming expands upon ideas of agency and resistance against systems 

At about 45:30, Yiming reflects on connections between the Chrysanthemum Virus and the coronavirus

At about 51:00, The two discuss the story “Swimmer of Yangtze”

At about 52:10, Yiming tells of the beautiful homage to his grandmother in the book

At about 53:10, Yiming turns the tables and asks Pete probing questions about the ever-encroaching AI

At about 56:40, Yiming talks about the “incredible” students he’s spoken with and reflects on a “biased sample” and the “paradigm shift” between disparate groups he speaks with regarding AI and its implementation 

At about 1:01:00, Yiming reflects on the “worry” he has over critical thinking skills and employment in a future focused on AI

At about 1:02:20, Pete asks about “+86 Shanghai” and its immigration stories 

At about 1:03:20, The two discuss the balance between changing the system and ideas of assimilation and Yiming talks about personal connections to “mining [his] own immigration story” and changing immigration narratives

At about 1:07:50, The two reflect on Kaveh Akbar’s brilliant work that Yiming riffs off in the book; Pete shares a story about Kaveh’s profundity in action, and Yiming talks about censorship and the timing of the release of his book

 

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      Pete is very excited to have one or two podcast episodes per month featured on the website of Chicago Review of Books. The audio will be posted, along with a written interview culled from the audio. His conversation with Jeff Pearlman, a recent guest, is up at Chicago Review.

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   This month’s Patreon bonus episode features an exploration of formative and transformative writing for children, as Pete surveys wonderful writers on their own influences.

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    Please tune in for Episode 327 with Adolfo Guzman-Lopez. Adolfo Guzman-Lopez has been a reporter at LAist 89.3, the Los Angeles NPR affiliate since 2000. He reported and hosted Imperfect Paradise: The Forgotten Revolutionary, a true crime podcast looking into the death in 1994 of Chicano college activist Oscar Gomez. He has reported on L.A. politics, education, art, museums and other topics. His stories have also aired and published nationally on NPR, The Washington Post, and other media, and his poetry, especially from time with the Taco Shop Poets, has been awarded and anthologized. 

   The episode airs later today, March 3. 

    Please go to ceasefiretoday.org, and/or https://act.uscpr.org/a/letaidin to call your congresspeople and demand an end to the forced famine and destruction of Gaza and the Gazan people.

      You can also donate at chuffed.org, World Central Kitchen, and so many more, and/or you can contact writer friend Ursula Villarreal-Moura directly or through Pete, as she has direct links with friends in Gaza.

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