So: an update on the launch...
Saturday, 31 October 2015
Day 1: Singapore Writers Festival
Labels:
Singapore
Friday, 30 October 2015
Q & A: Yeow Kai Chai
Lit-wise, Hong Kong and Singapore
are both busy at the moment. The Hong Kong International Literary Festival started on Monday, October 26, and runs
through until November 8. Meanwhile, The Singapore Writers Festival starts
today, October 30, and also runs until November 8. (The two Festivals often overlap; when last
year I asked why, I was told it enabled authors travelling long distances from
the West to visit both Hong Kong, and Singapore.)
Yesterday, Phillipa Milne,
Programme Manager, Hong Kong International Literary Festival answered
questions. Today, it’s the turn of Yeow
Kai Chai, Festival Director, Singapore Writers Festival. (SWF)
So: over to Kai Chai…
Thursday, 29 October 2015
Q & A: Phillipa Milne
Lit-wise, Hong Kong and Singapore
are both busy at the moment. The Hong Kong International Literary Festival started on Monday, October 26, and runs
through until November 8. Meanwhile, The Singapore Writers Festival starts
tomorrow, October 30, and also runs until November 8. (The two Festivals often overlap; when last
year I asked why, I was told it enabled authors travelling long distances from
the West to visit both Hong Kong, and Singapore.)
Today, Phillipa Milne, Programme
Manager, Hong Kong International Literary Festival, answers questions. Tomorrow, it will be the turn of Yeow Kai
Chai, Festival Director, Singapore Writers Festival.
So: over to Phillipa…
Wednesday, 28 October 2015
Ubud Censorship / Upcoming Festivals
The Ubud Writers & Readers Festival starts today, and runs through until November 1. The start
of the Festival has been marred by censorship. This year is the 50th
anniversary of communist repression and killings in Indonesia, in 1965. Ubud Writers &
Readers Festival had planned to mark the anniversary – but the authorities had
other ideas.
Labels:
Indonesia
Tuesday, 27 October 2015
David T. K. Wong by Lee Li Ying
Author and philanthropist David T. K. Wong is an elder
statesman of Asian letters. Here, Lee Li Ying, one of his editors at Epigram Books, the Singapore-based publisher of
Adrift, the first part of his multi-volume family memoir, reveals him to be a man
who knows his passion, purpose and priorities.
Monday, 26 October 2015
Q & A: Chantal Jauvin
Chantal Jauvin co-authored, with Dr.
Amporn Wathanavongs, The Boy with A
Bamboo Heart, an account of Dr. Amporn’s life.
Dr. Amporn, the founder of the Foundation for Rehabilitation and Development of Children and Family (FORDEC), is today one
of Thailand's most generous benefactors – but he didn’t have an easy start to life.
Orphaned at six, he scrambled for survival in the markets of Surin. At fifteen, he became a boy soldier, trekking
through the Cambodian jungle. His tumultuous experiences left him prone to self-loathing,
but through learning to accept the kindness of others he surmounted his
self-destructive tendencies. After a spell as a Buddhist monk, he was able to
follow his true vocation, and, eventually, to save the lives of over 50,000
street children.
Asian Review of Books / More Catching-up
See the Asian Review of Books for ever-interesting discussion. Here is a list of reviews, excerpts, letters, essays, and round ups published whilst I was away:
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