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  • Published: 30 October 2025
  • ISBN: 9781837311095
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00

I Deliver Parcels in Beijing

On Making a Living




A witty and humane account of one man, multiple jobs and a driving desire to thrive

In the twenty years following Hu AnYan’s high school graduation, he has held nineteen different jobs. He’s been a convenience store clerk, a bicycle salesman, a security guard and a delivery driver (among many other things). He moves from city to city in China, slipping away any time the work gets too punishing or the bosses too bossy, carrying with him nothing but his copies of Chekhov and Carver.

A million-copy bestseller in China, I Deliver Parcels in Beijing is Hu’s account of his life as a low-wage labourer working to live, not living to work. From the psychology of the pecking order on a parcel-sorting factory floor to the perfect alcohol dose to get some daylight shut-eye before a punishing night shift, from the Kafkaesque bureaucracy of the hiring departments to the ideal layout of a delivery route, Hu’s sincere curiosity and deadpan humour illuminate the lives behind the low wage roles we often take for granted, and highlight Hu’s quietly radical relationship to work. By harnessing his love of literature and the new perspectives it offers him, Hu reminds us of the liberating possibilities of a great book.

  • Published: 30 October 2025
  • ISBN: 9781837311095
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00

About the author

Hu AnYan

Hu Anyan was born in Guangzhou, China, in 1979. After graduating from secondary school he joined the workforce, moving between cities and odd jobs to make a living. In 2020, a blog post based on his experience as a delivery driver in Beijing went viral, leading to the publication of his first book, I Deliver Parcels in Beijing (Insight Media, 2023). It has since become a major national bestseller in China and will be translated into fifteen languages.

Praise for I Deliver Parcels in Beijing

Illuminating and often startling

Guardian

Hypnotic . . . I Deliver Parcels in Beijing is quietly revolutionary simply because it treats the minutiae of work itself as important. The bureaucratic nightmare of trying to get a company to onboard a new employee; the propensity of electronic delivery bikes to break down; the discomfort of delivering packages in the freezing cold, but having to wear fingerless gloves to type on a phone screen—that these can be the topic of a book is almost revelatory

Washington Post

An insightful, relatable, and often humorous account of working life in twenty-first-century China

Jacobin