Priscilla King reviews Launch Pad by Shelly Bryant (Singapore: Epigram Books, 2017).
Read MoreCyril Wong reviews Guess and Check by Thaddeus Rutkowski (Gival Press, 2017).
Read More"Sleeping with Tomatoes" from Picasso's Tears by Wong May (USA: Octopus Books, 2014).
Read MoreDeven Philbrick reviews Yeo Wei Wei’s These Foolish Things (Singapore: Ethos Books, 2015).
Read MoreWhen a few gym goers complained about another patron's "gay" tank top, they did not know that their complaint would launch a campaign for equality.
Read More30 Singaporean writers, artists, and thinkers, living in Singapore and abroad, give their favorite read of the year.
Read MoreEric Norris reviews Death Wish by Gwee Li Sui (Singapore: Landmark Books, 2017).
Read MoreAndrea Yew reviews National Book Award finalist Pachinko by Min Jin Lee (USA: Grand Central Publishing, 2017).
Read MoreJee Leong Koh interviews Canada-based literary scholar Joanne Leow about Singapore’s educational system.
Read MoreShort story by Jon Gresham.
Read MoreOur 2017 Fundraising Campaign. Please give generously.
Read More32 Singaporean writers, artists, and thinkers, living in Singapore and abroad, pick their favorite read of the year.
Read More33 Singaporean writers, artists, and scholars recommend their favorite read in 2015.
Read MoreAlfian Sa'at speaks at the Singapore Writers Festival in Singapore about the academics, artists, and writers who suspect that they have been denied job or tenure or asked to leave their job because of their activism or criticism of the government.
Read MoreWould any of Singapore's writers raise questions at the Singapore Writers Festival, opening in Singapore in two days, about this list of censored academics and artists?
Read MoreAn interview with sound artist Zul Mahmod.
Read MoreIan Tan reviews Donald Breckenridge’s And Then (USA: David R. Godine, 2017).
Read MoreRamsundar Lakshminarayanan's photographic series.
Read MoreStewart Dorward reviews Philip Holden’s Heaven Has Eyes (Singapore: Epigram Books, 2016).
Read MoreAn Opinion piece by Jill J. Tan on how Singaporeans living in the U.S. can respond to American politics. The first of a regular political column appearing once every two months.
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