“You smell like the sun, we say to a person/ carrying the loosened backpack of a long day.” —from “BRUSHING MY TEETH AT THE EDGE OF ELIZABETH PLACE”
Read MoreLydia Wei reviews Anything but Human by Daryl Lim Wei Jie (Singapore: Landmark Books, 2021).
Read MoreThree poems by Sal that play with tropes in NSFW K-pop fanfiction and borrow language from real YouTube comments left on 'focus cams' or jigcams.
Read MoreWas she just a subservient woman although she tried so hard to be self-aware and smart? The unnamed protagonist in Suhasini Patni’s new story “is it a curse or is it the day” wondered.
Read MoreGround-breaking in their time, but are these Southeast Asian books good reads? This month, Ng Yi-Sheng gives the low-down, and one thumbs-up.
Read More“I wanted to live to tree time.” Shalini Sengupta reviews How I Became a Tree (India: Aleph Books, 2017) and VIP: Very Important Plant (London: Shearsman, 2022) by Sumana Roy.
Read MoreIn “Dear Pluto,” Susan L. Lin writes to the Death Planet about her plans to visit it in the distant future.
Read MoreIn these attentive poems, Jackson Minjoon Wright shines a light on, as he puts it, “the particularities of adoption and secluded life in the Midwest.”
Read MoreIn these exacting poems, Joey S. Kim considers the impact of empire on identity and writing.
Read MoreMiranda Jeyaretnam reviews Where I Was: A Memoir About Forgetting and Remembering by Constance Singam, which tells the history of Singapore from the perspective of a courageous woman activist.
Read MoreCare to read fantasy and science fiction novels inspired by Chinese history? Ng Yi-Sheng gives you the lowdown on five recent books.
Read MoreWhat if dogs can read? Chris Huntington ponders this and other questions in these new poems.
Read More“Singapore's climb from a Third World country to a First World nation was made easier, thanks to the escalator.”
Read More“To what extent should Singlit speak to global cultures and the threat of the climate crisis, and how should it do so?” Zining Mok reviews Red Earth by Esther Vincent Xueming (USA: Blue Cactus Press, 2021).
Read More“When you dream, how do you know you’re in your own body?” the narrator of Monica Kim’s story “Dreamlapse” asks.
Read MoreTo impose a bit of sanity on himself, Ng Yi-Sheng returns this month to the original theme of #YISHREADS. These five books are all Southeast Asian works.
Read MoreAnnina Zheng-Hardy reviews Notes from the Birth Year by Mia Ayumi Malhotra (USA: Bateau Press, 2022).
Read MoreElise J. Choi reviews Disorientation by Elaine Hsieh Chou (US: Penguin Press, 2022).
Read MoreWe’re very pleased to announce the results of the 8th annual Singapore Poetry Contest. Enjoy the winning poems!
Read MoreAmanat is a groundbreaking anthology featuring the stories of women writers from Kazakhstan over the past thirty years.
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