The thirteenth edition of the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival, one of Southeast Asia’s leading literary events, concluded this October
30th. Over five days, around 170 authors, artists and performers
from more than 20 countries took centre stage, the largest contingent being
from Indonesia and Australia.
Two Singaporean writers were featured in the main
program: New York-based Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan, author of the novel Sarong Party Girls, and Amanda Lee Koe, whose
short story collection Ministry of Moral
Panic won the Singapore Literature Prize. The launch of Singapore-published
Tales of Two Cities: Singapore and Hong
Kong (Ethos Books), a short story collection of writers from the Singapore
Writers Group and the Hong Kong Writers Circle rounded up the Singapore presence.
Keynotes delivered by Indonesian prominent ‘resistant
fiction’ writer and journalist Seno Gumira Ajidarma and by Chinese-Canadian
actress and human rights advocate Anastasia Lin attracted large audiences on
day one. Another highlight was Korean-American novelist and investigative
journalist Suki Kim’s recount of her undercover expedition into North Korea,
posing as a missionary and English teacher. Her travails didn’t end once she
left the secluded country, as she faced further obstacles trying to publish her
story as ‘investigative journalism’ rather than as a ‘memoir’, which is how it
was eventually published.
One of the biggest draws of the day was Indonesian renowned
epic novelist Eka Kurniawan, whose celebrated novel Beauty is a Wound has recently been translated into English. His appearance at the Festival came after last year’s panel-discussion
in which he was taking part —about the 1965 massacre— was cancelled due to
government pressures.
On day two, it was the turn for powerful accounts of struggle
and redemption, such as Shandra Wowuruntu’s, an Indonesian woman victim of the
sex-trafficking-industry turned human rights advocate, and American Mitchell
Jackson’s journey from imprisonment for drug-related charges to becoming an award-winning
author and a faculty member of prestigious US universities.
Well-known Indian authors Githa Hariharan, Amit
Chaudhuri, and Jeet Thayil were featured on days two and three. Speaking on the
panel The Spell of Poetry, Jeet
Thayil expressed his reluctance to talking about poetry to explain it, which
would make as much sense as trying to explain dance, in his opinion. He also
derided the notion of inspiration as the engine of poetic creation, arguing it
is overrated, in detriment of steady work. Reading other authors’ poems right
before he starts writing, he disclosed, sets the mood for his own creative
flow.
Also on day three, literary luminary Lionel Shriver
talked about her latest darkly humorous novel The Mandibles: A Family, 2029–2047, the saga of a well-to-do family
whose fortune vaporises along with everybody else’s in the country in a
financially dystopian near future. A wall is built in the US-Mexico border, and
Mexico did pay for it, she said —alluding to electoral promises made by “a US
presidential candidate”. The difference being that in her novel, the wall was
built by Mexico to keep Americans out. She likes to think that the presidential
candidate took the idea from her, she added.
On the same day, Mexican novelist and translator Juan
Pablo Villalobos spoke about his novel Down
the Rabbit Hole, and about his current project: a non-fiction account of the
ordeals of unaccompanied Central American migrant children in the US-Mexican
borders. When he is looking for a voice in his writing, he explains, he is
actually looking for a tone, as in music. He mentioned Peruvian Alfredo Bryce Echenique’s Un Mundo para Julius, and J. D.
Salinger’s The
Catcher in the Rye as works that had influenced his own.
The last day included impressive presentations, such
as American Hanya Yanagihara’s – she is the author of the celebrated novels The People in the Trees and A Little Life; Nigerian novelist Helon
Habila, who shared the stories of some of the Chibok Girls kidnapped by Boko
Haram; and bestselling Australian novelist Hannah Kent, who talked about her
new book, The Good People.
This was my second year attending the Ubud Festival,
and it is now even clearer to me why international visitors flood this town for
the event. It is a perfect storm of beautiful surroundings, kind hospitality,
compelling themes, and a string of original thinkers from the region and beyond.