Ovidia Yu was born in, lives in and writes about Singapore. After a happy childhood spent reading, drawing comics and dramatizing stories, she dropped out of medical school to become a writer. She achieved international success with a trio of Aunty Lee Mysteries: Aunty Lee’s Delights; Aunty Lee’s Deadly Specials; Aunty Lee’s Chilled Revenge. Her latest novel, The Frangipani Tree Mystery, takes her crime writing in a new direction.
The novel is set in 1930s colonial Singapore. Ovidia says she chose to write about her grandparents’ Singapore because it was where and when most of the stories she and her friends heard as children were set. The Frangipani Tree Mystery introduces amateur sleuth Chen Su Lin, a local Chinese-Singaporean with a limp. She is hired by Acting Governor Palin to look after his youngest daughter. Whilst working for the Palins, it falls to Su Lin to help ace-detective Chief Inspector Le Froy uncover the cause of a mysterious death….
Showing posts with label Singapore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singapore. Show all posts
Sunday 30 July 2017
Tuesday 18 July 2017
Singapore: Unlikely Power by John Curtis Perry
John Curtis Perry is the Henry Willard Denison Professor of History at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University. He has also served as the director of Tufts’ Maritime Studies program and was the founding president of its Institute for Global Maritime Studies. He has written widely on Asia-US relations, particularly on relations between American and Japan. In 1991, the Japanese government awarded him the Imperial decoration of the Order of the Sacred Treasure for his contributions to US-Japan relations.
Perry's latest book Singapore: Unlikely Power, explores the implausibility of Singapore's success. It tracks the meteoric rise of Singapore to the status of first-world dynamo in just three decades, shows how the city-state’s founders adopted a resolutely pragmatic approach to economic development rather than following any one fashionable ideology, and offers an overview of a country that has perfected one of the world's most influential political-economic models, despite its tiny size.
In this guest post, John Curtis Perry considers whether Singapore can offer a model to other countries.
Perry's latest book Singapore: Unlikely Power, explores the implausibility of Singapore's success. It tracks the meteoric rise of Singapore to the status of first-world dynamo in just three decades, shows how the city-state’s founders adopted a resolutely pragmatic approach to economic development rather than following any one fashionable ideology, and offers an overview of a country that has perfected one of the world's most influential political-economic models, despite its tiny size.
In this guest post, John Curtis Perry considers whether Singapore can offer a model to other countries.
Friday 23 June 2017
My working day by Eldes Tran
My working day is an occasional series in which publishing professionals talk about their jobs.
Eldes Tran is an assistant editor at Epigram Books, Singapore’s largest independent publisher of local stories for all ages. She mostly edits nonfiction manuscripts, but also some children’s books. Apart from editing, she also acts as a project manager seeing a book through all stages, including making sure the right illustrator is picked, the layout is balanced, and deadlines are met.
Epigram Books is Eldes’ first foray into book publishing, but she has been an editor for 11 years in the US and Asia. She started at newspapers Newsday and the Los Angeles Times, and later spent six years in Hong Kong with the South China Morning Post and New York Times.
So, over to Eldes...
Eldes Tran is an assistant editor at Epigram Books, Singapore’s largest independent publisher of local stories for all ages. She mostly edits nonfiction manuscripts, but also some children’s books. Apart from editing, she also acts as a project manager seeing a book through all stages, including making sure the right illustrator is picked, the layout is balanced, and deadlines are met.
Epigram Books is Eldes’ first foray into book publishing, but she has been an editor for 11 years in the US and Asia. She started at newspapers Newsday and the Los Angeles Times, and later spent six years in Hong Kong with the South China Morning Post and New York Times.
So, over to Eldes...
Tuesday 30 May 2017
Lion City Lit notes: update to William Farquhar and Singapore book launch
Asian Books Blog is based in Singapore – the Lion City. Lucía Damacela keeps an eye on local listings.
The book William Farquhar and Singapore, by Nadia H. Wright, which will be launched in Penang, as we announced in a previous note, is also being launched in Singapore. Here are the details:
Date: May 30, 2017
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Place: The Salon, National Museum of Singapore, 93 Stamford Road, Singapore 178897
Transport: Bras Basah and Dhobi Ghaut MRT.
Price: Free admission - RSVP at admin@entrepotpublishing.com.
Opening address by Professor Tommy Koh, National University of Singapore. Talk by the author, Nadia H. Wright. Official launch by Scott Wightman, British High Commissioner to Singapore.
The book William Farquhar and Singapore, by Nadia H. Wright, which will be launched in Penang, as we announced in a previous note, is also being launched in Singapore. Here are the details:
Date: May 30, 2017
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Place: The Salon, National Museum of Singapore, 93 Stamford Road, Singapore 178897
Transport: Bras Basah and Dhobi Ghaut MRT.
Price: Free admission - RSVP at admin@entrepotpublishing.com.
Opening address by Professor Tommy Koh, National University of Singapore. Talk by the author, Nadia H. Wright. Official launch by Scott Wightman, British High Commissioner to Singapore.
Saturday 20 May 2017
This weekend: literary events in Singapore
Asian Books Blog is based in Singapore – the Lion City. Lucía Damacela keeps an eye on local listings. A sample of literary events taking place in Singapore this weekend
Migrant Poetic Tales
Saturday, 20 May 2017
5pm to 6pm
Booktique
CityLink Mall, #B1-17A, 1 Raffles Link, Singapore 039393
Free Admission (tickets through Peatix)
Migrant Poetic Tales
Saturday, 20 May 2017
5pm to 6pm
Booktique
CityLink Mall, #B1-17A, 1 Raffles Link, Singapore 039393
Free Admission (tickets through Peatix)
A dialogue between Singapore poets, migrant workers and the community at large, this event features migrant writers from Bangladesh, The Philippines, India-Tamil, Indonesia and Singapore. The event is co-organized by Amrakajona Zakir, a two-time winner of the Migrant Poetry Competition.
Friday 12 May 2017
Asian Festival of Children’s Content
The Asian Festival of Children’s Content (AFCC) is held annually in Singapore. This year it takes place next week, from Wednesday May 17, to Sunday May 21. The Festival, organised by the National Book Development Council of Singapore, aims to strengthen the creation and promotion of children’s books and other content, with an emphasis on Asia. Lucía Damacela reports.
More than one hundred local and international authors, illustrators, editors, and other professionals from the publishing industry will participate in this year’s AFCC. Countries represented include Australia, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Japan, the Philippines, Malaysia, Netherlands, New Zealand, Thailand, the United States and the United Kingdom.
This year, the country of focus is Indonesia. The Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organisation (SEAMEO) is a regional intergovernmental body promoting cooperation through education, science, and culture. It operates a regional centre for quality improvement of teachers and education personnel in Jakarta, where Dr. Felicia Utorodewo is the director in language. She will be speaking at AFCC, as will Dr. Murti Bunanta, children’s literature specialist and president of the Indonesia section of the International Board on Books for Young People. Mr. Wandi S. Brata, CEO of Indonesia’s Gramedia Publishing, will also attend, along with a team from Indonesia’s Society for the Advancement of Children’s Literature.
Thursday 27 April 2017
Lion City lit listing: Art Book Fair at Gillman Barracks
Asian
Books Blog is based in Singapore – the Lion City. Lucía Damacela keeps an eye on
local listings.
What: An annual event, the Singapore Art Book Fair (SABF) showcases contemporary art books & magazines.
Tuesday 25 April 2017
Lion City Lit: OF ZOOS
Saturday 15 April 2017
Lion City lit notes: Singaporean writers shortlisted for international short story prize
Asian Books Blog is based in Singapore. Our regular column
Lion City Lit explores in-depth what’s going on in the City-State, lit-wise.
Lion City lit notes provide quick updates between columns. By Lucia
Damacela
Friday 31 March 2017
Lion City lit notes / SingPoWriMo starts tomorrow
Asian
Books Blog is based in Singapore. Our regular column Lion City Lit explores
in-depth what’s going on in the City-State, lit-wise. Lion City lit notes
provide quick updates between columns. By Lucia Damacela
Friday 17 March 2017
William L. Gibson on trilogies
William L. Gibson is the author
of Singapore Black, Singapore Yellow and Singapore Red, which together form the
Detective Hawksworth Trilogy, hardboiled historical thrillers set in late 19th
Century Malaya and Singapore. Gibson says he always wanted to write a trilogy, and
he here explains why he decided the three-novel format “would be the best way
to tell the story I wanted to tell.”
Wednesday 8 February 2017
Lion City Lit: The Eloquent Orifice by Lucía Damacela
Asian
Books Blog is based in Singapore. Lion City Lit explores in-depth what’s going
on in the City-State, lit-wise. In Lucía Damacela’s fourth installment of her series about
Singapore online literary magazines, her focus is on The
Eloquent Orifice.
Founded in 2013 by
a group of creative professionals, including the current Editor-in-Chief Crispin
Rodrigues and Creative Director Geraldine Tan, The Eloquent Orifice (EO) is an
online academic literary journal created to bring the arts “within reach of those who believe in
the power of critical thought, active discussion and passionate creation in the
shaping of contemporary society.”
EO is always open for submissions of original literary pieces, articles and art works. Published
twice a year, one issue is out at the beginning and one at the end of the year.
Their sixth and seventh issues combined are soon to be released.
Geraldine Tan, an editor and writer currently doing
post-graduate studies in Melbourne, and Crispin Rodrigues, and educator, writers and editor, responded to
questions about the magazine’s history, purpose and functioning.
Friday 28 October 2016
Indie spotlight: Tabby Stirling
Indie Spotlight is Siobhan Daiko’s monthly column on self-publishing. This month Siobhan
offers a platform to indie author Tabby
Stirling.
Tabby now lives in Scotland with her husband, two
children and a beagle, but she was previously an expat in Singapore. She has
had several flash and short stories published in Spelk fiction, Camroc Fiction
Press, Literary Orphans, Mslexia and others.
Tabby recently signed with Unbound, a UK-based literary crowdfunding
publisher, for her novel Blood on the
Banana Leaf. This shines a light on the
maid abuse that came to her attention whilst she was living in Singapore. It
explores how women cope in the most demeaning of circumstances.
Over to Tabby…
Tuesday 20 September 2016
Lion City Lit This Is Not a Safety Barrier / Lucía Damacela
Asian Books Blog is based in Singapore. Lion City Lit
explores what is going on in the City-State lit-wise. Here Lucía Damacela attends the launch of This Is Not a Safety Barrier, a collection of 113 Singapore-inspired
poems and photos from 69 contributors. This Is Not a Safety Barrier, edited by Marc Nair and Yen
Phang, offers commentary that questions and
challenges the physical and symbolic barriers erected in Singapore, a place constantly
under construction. It is published by Ethos Books.
Friday 16 September 2016
Lion City Lit: Uncle Rajah’s Flying Carpet Show
Asian Books Blog is based in Singapore. Our regular
column Lion City Lit explores in-depth what’s going on in the City-State,
lit-wise. Here Raelee Chapman talks to Dr Chris Mooney-Singh an Australian writer, poet, musician and
performance artist who has lived and worked in Singapore for a number of years, and who has made his mark on the City-State
as an all-round arts entrepreneur.
Thursday 28 July 2016
Lion City Lit: Quarterly Literary Review Singapore
Asian Books
Blog is based in Singapore. Lion City Lit explores in-depth
what’s going on in the City-State, lit-wise. Here Lucía Damacela continues her occasional
series of conversations with founders and editors of Singapore-based online literary
magazines. Today, the focus is on the Quarterly Literary Review Singapore, (QLRS), the longest- running online literary magazine in the country.
Wednesday 29 June 2016
Lion City Lit: Q & A with Eric Tinsay Valles,
Asian
Books Blog is based in Singapore. Our regular column, Lion City Lit, explores
in-depth what's happening in the City-State lit-wise. Here, Elissa Viornery interviews Eric Tinsay Valles, Festival Director of the National Poetry Festival (NPF). This will run from July 29 to 31 at the National Museum, Lasalle College of the Arts, and other venues.
Sunday 19 June 2016
Lion City lit notes: June 25 launch of Tales of Two Cities
Asian Books Blog is based in Singapore. Our regular column Lion City Lit explores in-depth what’s going on in the City-State, lit-wise. Lion City lit notes provide quick updates between columns. By Lucia Damacela
June 25: Launch of Tales of Two Cities: Singapore and Hong Kong
Tales of Two Cities is an anthology that comprises twenty three short stories in which writers from The Singapore Writers Group and the Hong Kong Writers Circle introduce their respective cities to the readers. Told from a variety of unexpected angles, the stories are grouped by theme: the changing city; the historical city; the mystical city; the capricious city. Published by Ethos Books, Tales of Two Cities will be launched at Kinokuniya (Ngee Ann City, Orchard Road) on Saturday June 25, from 4 to 5. A review of the book was previously published in this blog. Authors from The Singapore Writers Group will read excerpts and answer questions about their stories and about the process of putting the collection together. There will be a lucky draw and authors will sign copies of the book.This event is open to the public. Admission is free.
Thursday 2 June 2016
Lion City Lit: Swag
Asian
Books Blog is based in Singapore. Our regular column Lion City Lit explores
in-depth what’s going on in the City-State, lit-wise. Here Lucía Damacela continues
her series investigating Singapore online literary magazines by highlighting
new kid on the block, Swag.
Tuesday 24 May 2016
Lion City Lit: Marion Kleinschmidt and Coill.net
Asian Books Blog is based in
Singapore. Our regular column Lion City Lit explores in-depth what’s going on
in the City-State, lit-wise. Here Raelee
Chapman talks to Marion Kleinschmidt.
Marion a native of Bavaria, but now dividing her time between the USA and Singapore, is the founder of Coill.net which provides dynamic, bootcamp-style online courses to help writers of all levels to lift their game. She here discusses her upcoming Singapore-based hands-on writing retreat, and the writing scene in Singapore in general. Marion has worked for the
last 12 years as freelance copywriter, editor, translator and creative writing
coach. A prolific member of Singapore Writers Group, she has published short fiction in Germany and Singapore. She started to
run highly successful writing retreats in Bintan and Batam last year.
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