Asian
Books Blog is based in Singapore. Lion City Lit explores what’s going on in the
City-State, lit-wise. Here journalist Tom Benner explains why it’s a wonderful
source of stories…
My
wife had the same job at the same university in Boston, Massachusetts, for a
very long time, and decided she wanted to work in Asia, where so much in the
education world is unfolding.
I
was up for the adventure, and as a writer and editor, my skills are pretty
transportable.
We
wound up in Singapore. She’s a college dean, and I’m a freelance journalist.
It’s
not always easy to be a freelancer. You eat what you kill, have no job
security, and your income can vary wildly from month to month.
That
said, there are many positives. You get to explore your interests, discover new
places and things, accept jobs that interest you, and turn down those that
don’t.
I’ve
been lucky enough to get published by some great news outlets, like Al Jazeera
English, Nikkei Asian Review, the Christian Science Monitor and the Atlantic,
and local publications including the Straits Times and Today.
Singapore
is a surprisingly newsy place.
If
you’re a business journalist, you get to cover a global financial center that
is at or near the top of most lists for the wealthiest places, most expensive
places, most millionaires, ease of doing business, and on and on.
If
you’re a policy wonk, Singapore’s got that down. The first place in the world
to introduce road congestion pricing is a smart city like no other, a wired,
digitally savvy place.
If
you’re into regional issues, Singapore is at the center of unfolding economic
stories like the Association of Southeast Asian Nations creating a single market
and production base, at the crossroads between China and India.
The
annual Shangri-La Dialogue always draws the world’s attention to Singapore each
spring. It’s a high-level gathering of defense heads from around the world;
this past year’s big story was China’s ambitious land-grab in the South China
Sea and the geopolitical ramifications.
From
tiny Singapore, a rich variety of places and cultures are just a short trip
away. Over the recent holiday break we took a flight to Siem Reap, Cambodia, to
spend a week visiting ancient temples and learning about a history that goes
back centuries. Once we were back in Singapore, we drove with friends to
Malacca for a weekend away.
Since
setting up shop in Singapore, I’ve been twice now to Timor-Leste, the first new
country of the 21st century, along with fellow members of the
Singapore Press Club, to put on media training workshops. While there I wrote stories
for Al Jazeera English on some of the challenges facing the young country,
including corruption among inexperienced government leaders, and
ill-intentioned efforts to muzzle the media.
Thanks
also to the Singapore Press Club, I learned of and applied for a journalism fellowship
program called Dateline Tokyo, which was operated out of the Foreign
Correspondents’ Club of Japan, in fall 2014. Six journalists from
English-speaking countries around the world were invited to Tokyo to cover the
city as it gears up for hosting the 2020 summer Olympics.
There
are fun stories to be written in Tokyo. Such as how the game of baseball speaks
to differences in Japanese and American culture. And what sumo wrestlers eat to
get so big. And how hosting the Olympics can transform a city – as it did for
Tokyo in 1964, as post-World War II Japan reemerged onto the international
stage.
I
wear other hats. I write a monthly column about life in Singapore for a
Japanese newspaper, and help a local college with its website and blog posts.
I’ve
also been a contributing writer and editor on several book projects.
At
some point I’d like to put together an annotated list that would be called
something like “A Singapore Reader”, listing many of the books that someone
interested in learning about this region might want to read.
Some
fine writing has come out of Southeast Asia. I had read George Orwell on his
time spent in Burma long before I arrived here, as well as W. Somerset Maugham
on his Southeast Asian travels. But I didn’t know writers like Mochtar Lubis,
whose critical views on Indonesian politics landed him in jail, and Han Suyin,
whose “And The Rain My Drink” captured efforts by British security forces to
maintain the slippery colonial grip on Malaya.
Newer
voices I’ve come to admire include the fiction writer Catherine Lim; the poet
and cultural critic Kirpal Singh; playwrights Alfian Sa'at and Huzir Sulaiman;
and journalist turned author Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan, whose wonderful “A Tiger in
the Kitchen” served as my introductory text on Singapore.
Those
are just a few of the great writers I’ve encountered in print. Ethos Books and
Monsoon Books are among the local presses adding to the regional bookshelf, and
the interest is far from provincial. As Asia’s dominance rises in the 21st
Century, the eyes of the world will be on Singapore and Southeast Asia.
Tom
Benner’s work can be found here.