English PEN in association with the Asia Literary Review has just announced a terrific opportunity for translators and writers in East
and South-East Asia - a new translation project and award, PEN Presents East and South-East Asia.
Friday 14 October 2016
Sunday 9 October 2016
Social Sunday
Sundays
used to be for lounging with the papers, now they are just as likely for
lounging with iPads. So if you're lazily clicking around looking for something
to read, here are a few suggestions, focussing on what's going on lit-wise in
Asia.
Saturday 8 October 2016
Karachi Literature Festival travels to London
To celebrate 70 years of Pakistan’s creation, Pakistan’s biggest
literary event, the Karachi Literature Festival (KLF) produced by
Oxford University Press (OUP), will be launched in London on 20 May 2017
at the Southbank Centre, as part of their annual Alchemy
festival. KLF London promises to be a vibrant celebration of Pakistani
literature and arts, providing a fantastic opportunity for Londoners to gain an
insight into the country’s complex history and culture.
Friday 7 October 2016
500 words from Graham Sage
500 words from...is a series of guest posts from authors writing about
Asia, or published by Asia-based, or Asia-focused, publishing houses, in which
they talk about their latest books. Polyglot Graham Sage divides his time between London, China and France. His previous books include an English-language
primer for use in China, and the French-language novel Les tribulations de J. Alfred Prufrock au pays des
moas géants. In November, he will publish The Phoenix and the Crow, his first novel in
English.
The Phoenix and the Crow
is a tale of morality and corruption in present-day small-town China. Wang Bin
a young teacher and ornithologist from Beijing travels to Pingyang, a small
town nestled in the mountains between Sichuan and Hunan. His aim is to photograph
the mountain phoenix, a rare bird with a blaze of rich colours that has never before
been captured on film.
Wang Bin soon
crosses paths with Pingyang’s, chief of police, a cruel man who rules with an
iron fist. The chief of police tries to drive Wang Bin permanently out of town.
But Wang Bin is falling in love with Xiao Zhou, a pretty receptionist at the seedy
hotel where he’s been staying. Wang Bin,
Xiao Zhou and other townsfolk concoct a plan to rid Pingyang of its dreadful chief
of police – a plan so far-fetched all agree it might just work.
So, Over to
Graham…
Sunday 2 October 2016
Social Sunday
Sundays used to be for lounging with the papers, now they are just as
likely for lounging with iPads. So if you're lazily clicking around looking for
something to read, here are a few suggestions, focussing on what's going on
lit-wise in Asia.
Saturday 1 October 2016
International Translation Day
Sept 30 is International Translation Day. Read a book translated from an Asian language this week!
Friday 30 September 2016
Indie spotlight: J. W. Durrah
Indie
Spotlight is Siobhan
Daiko’s monthly column on self-publishing. This month Siobhan
talks to indie author J. W. Durrah
J.
W. Durrah published his first short story, Something
to Remember, in Essence magazine
in 1972. An American, he has travelled widely in Asia, and he drew on his
experiences when writing his debut novel Jacob The Jew Vs. The Chinese Blood, which was published in July, through CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. A detective thriller, it is the first in a
planned series featuring NYPD detective Jacob
Jennings.
When
Jennings signs on for a three-year tour with the US Army’s Military
Intelligence unit, he expects to be deployed to Vietnam like his father before
him. Instead, he finds himself in Hong Kong, working a complex undercover sting
in cooperation with the Chinese police. Along the way he encounters Jerry
Baofung, a much-feared sorcerer, with links to the trade in illegal drugs.
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