Tuesday, 7 February 2017
Reopening....
Hello anybody out there...After the temporary closure since November, the blog will be reopening tomorrow, with normal service resumed within 2 weeks - when I get back to Singapore from the USA.
Monday, 7 November 2016
Temporary closure until after Chinese New Year
I am temporarily closing the blog, until after Chinese New Year - i.e. until Feb 2017. I'll keep tweeting and sharing links to Facebook, though, so keep an eye on those accounts, if you can, and I do hope you check out the blog when it re-opens. Thanks, Rosie.
Friday, 4 November 2016
Highlights of Ubud Writers and Readers Festival 2016 By Lucía Damacela
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.
Labels:
Indonesia,
Lion City lit
Tuesday, 1 November 2016
Published Today: Intruder In Mao’s Realm by Richard Kirkby
Intruder In Mao’s Realm, by British
academic Richard Kirkby, provides an insider’s view of China in the final
throes of the Cultural Revolution and its immediate aftermath.
Sunday, 30 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.
(Inter)National Novel Writing Month
Part writing
boot camp, part rollicking party, this November USA-based National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), which is
actually an international event, celebrates its 18th year of encouraging novelists
to get cracking, through the largest writing event in the world.
Friday, 28 October 2016
Indie spotlight: Tabby Stirling
Indie Spotlight is Siobhan Daiko’s monthly column on self-publishing. This month Siobhan
offers a platform to indie author Tabby
Stirling.
Tabby now lives in Scotland with her husband, two
children and a beagle, but she was previously an expat in Singapore. She has
had several flash and short stories published in Spelk fiction, Camroc Fiction
Press, Literary Orphans, Mslexia and others.
Tabby recently signed with Unbound, a UK-based literary crowdfunding
publisher, for her novel Blood on the
Banana Leaf. This shines a light on the
maid abuse that came to her attention whilst she was living in Singapore. It
explores how women cope in the most demeaning of circumstances.
Over to Tabby…
Labels:
Indie spotlight,
Singapore
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