Asian Books Blog is not a review site. If you want reviews, see the Asian Review of Books. Here is a list of its newest reviews:
Shanghai Homes: Palimpsests of Private Life by Jie Li reviewed by SY Koh
Green Shoots Under Soot-Stained Skies by Mark L. Clifford (excerpt)
Ouside reading: essays on Asian writing selected by the ARB editorial team
Sophia: Princess, Suffragette, Revolutionary by Anita Anand reviewed by Nigel Collett
Tuesday, 31 March 2015
Saturday, 28 March 2015
Irrawaddy Literary Festival Starts Today
The 3rd Irrawaddy Literary Festival starts today.
Check out the website here.
Check out the Facebook page here.
If you happen to be visiting the Festival, and you'd like to write about it for the blog, then let me know! (Email: asianbooksblog@gmail.com)
Check out the website here.
Check out the Facebook page here.
If you happen to be visiting the Festival, and you'd like to write about it for the blog, then let me know! (Email: asianbooksblog@gmail.com)
Labels:
Myanmar/Burma
Thursday, 26 March 2015
Guest Post: Dominique Wilson / Researching The Yellow Papers
Dominique
Wilson is an Australian historical novelist. She here gives an
in-depth account of how she researched her novel The Yellow Papers, and also offers advice to
others on how to research historical novels set, or partly set, in Asia.
The story
The Yellow Papers is a novel set between Australia and China, from just after the
two Opium Wars to the time of the Cultural Revolution. It is a story of love,
obsession and friendship set against a backdrop of war and racial
prejudice.
It begins in 1872 when China – still bruised from its defeat in the two Opium Wars – sends a group of boys, including seven-year-old Chen Mu, to America to study and bring back the secrets of the West. But nine years on Chen Mu becomes a fugitive and flees to Umberumberka, a mining town in outback Australia. He eventually finds peace working for Matthew Dawson, a rich pastoralist.
Labels:
China,
Guest post,
Oceania
Wednesday, 25 March 2015
Indie Spotlight: Juan Rader Bas
For this month’s Indie Spotlight, Raelee
Chapman chats with Juan Rader Bas, who describes himself as a Fil-Am Kicking
Scribe (Filipino-American, martial arts devotee & writer). Juan Rader Bas’s
debut novel, Back Kicks and Broken
Promises, was self-published with Abbott Press. It is a coming of age novel about an adopted
17-year-old Filipino who finds self-expression and fulfilment through martial
arts after moving from Singapore to New Jersey. Juan took time out from his
busy schedule as a public school teacher, parent, martial artist and writer to
discuss the indie process and his new writing projects.
Tuesday, 24 March 2015
Q & A with Cheryl Robson
Amongst many other
achievements, writer, editor, arts entrepreneur, and charity activist Cheryl
Robson founded Aurora Metro Books, which has offices in London, Sydney, and
Singapore, where she is now based. Aurora Metro is strong in non-fiction
titles relating to the arts, in biography, and in fiction for young
adults. It also has an exciting adult fiction list, including debut
novels from many new voices; it is particularly keen to champion previously
unpublished women writers. The company is committed to bringing
non-English-language writers to an English readership in good, accessible
translations. Authors from over 20 countries are represented in its lists, and
many of its translated titles are available in English for the first time.
I asked Cheryl about
her life and about Aurora Metro, and its big
ambitions.
Labels:
Q & A
Quick Comment from PP Wong
As reported here, The Life of a Banana by PP Wong has been longlisted for the Bailey's Women's Prize for
Fiction (formerly the Orange
Prize). It is one of four titles with Asian interest to have caught the
judges' eyes, the others are I
Am China, by Xiaolu Guo, A God in Every Stone, by Kamila Shamsie,
and The Bees, by Laline Paull, who was born in the UK of first
generation Indian Immigrants
PP had this to say
about the Prize's support for Asia's women writers: "I'm
absolutely thrilled that four Asian authors have been longlisted. In the last
year, I have seen some positive steps in the Western publishing industry
towards supporting fresh, fearless narratives by female Asian writers. For
example, Celeste Ng was chosen as Amazon's book of the year. While Yiyun Li and
Madeleine Thien were nominated for the UK Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award.
There is still more work to be done in encouraging more diverse voices, but I
am hopeful that changes are already starting to happen."
The
Prize will be awarded in London, on June 3. Good luck, PP!
This Week In Asian Review of Books
Asian Books Blog is not a review site. If you want reviews, see the Asian Review of Books. Here is a list of its newest reviews, and columns:
Voices from the Frontline: Narratives of Nonnative English Speaking Teachers by Icy Lee and Paul Sze reviewed by Peter Gordon
Confucius and the World He Created by Michael Schuman reviewed byJohn Butler
Islamic Schooling in East Java: a visit to a pesantren in Gontor by Pallavi Aiyar
A Bad Character by Deepti Kapoor reviewed by Jane Wallace
Voices from the Frontline: Narratives of Nonnative English Speaking Teachers by Icy Lee and Paul Sze reviewed by Peter Gordon
Confucius and the World He Created by Michael Schuman reviewed byJohn Butler
Islamic Schooling in East Java: a visit to a pesantren in Gontor by Pallavi Aiyar
A Bad Character by Deepti Kapoor reviewed by Jane Wallace
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