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#YISHREADS April 2025
#YISHREADS April 2025

Amidst a season of renewal this April, Ng Yi-Sheng takes us on a journey through the literature of mainland Southeast Asia.

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ReviewJee KohApril 25, 2025Ng Yi-ShengComment
“Accidents” and Other Poems
“Accidents” and Other Poems

“This is not a disease/ you isolate yourself to fix.” Three poems by Ryan Yeo on how to keep going.

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PoetryJee KohApril 18, 2025Ryan YeoComment
The View of Mukja: The Invisible Voices of Hwang Jungeun’s dd’s Umbrella
The View of Mukja: The Invisible Voices of Hwang Jungeun’s dd’s Umbrella

Taylor Taeyeon Song reviews Hwang Jungeun's dd's Umbrella.

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ReviewJee KohApril 18, 2025Taeyeon SongComment
“Ode to Watching My Sister Eat Lychees” and Other Poems
“Ode to Watching My Sister Eat Lychees” and Other Poems

Good food-based advice for Poetry Month: find it in yourself to love flies, but don’t leave them any lychee pieces… and don’t talk to bears about mahua. Three poems from Kunjana Parashar.

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PoetryJee KohApril 11, 2025Kunjana ParasharComment
“Bloodline” and Other Poems
“Bloodline” and Other Poems

When trees join root systems or a grandmother gifts a child knowledge, “who adopts whom?” Three poems by Kinjal Sethia.

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PoetryJee KohApril 4, 2025Kinjal SethiaComment
#YISHREADS March 2025
#YISHREADS March 2025

This March, Ng Yi-Sheng treads into subversive histories that traverse from 19th Century Malaya, the Peloponnesian Wars, and a Bangkok that slips out of the reaches of time.

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ReviewJee KohMarch 28, 2025Ng Yi-ShengComment
“Lent Birds” and Other Poems
“Lent Birds” and Other Poems

What do sea birds, Malayalam, and an Indian Jesus have in common? Three poems on home by Feby Joseph.

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PoetryJee KohMarch 28, 2025Feby JosephComment
The One in the Mirror
The One in the Mirror

The elections are over. The architects of happiness won again. A new story by Jason Low.

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FictionJee KohMarch 21, 2025Jason LowComment
No door to slam this time
No door to slam this time

Amanda Juico Dela Cruz discusses the weight of beauty in an essay that braids rage, relief, and power.

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EssayJee KohMarch 14, 2025Amanda Juico Dela CruzComment
Falling, Wilting, Blooming: Floral Futures in Mok Zining’s the orchid folios
Falling, Wilting, Blooming: Floral Futures in Mok Zining’s the orchid folios

In this winning essay of the 2024 Singapore Unbound Awards for the Best Undergraduate Critical Essay on Singapore and Other Literatures, Sami Goh explores the floral futures of Singapore, as posited by Mok Zining’s the orchid folios.

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EssayJee KohMarch 7, 2025Sami GohComment
#YISHREADS February 2025
#YISHREADS February 2025

From sci-fi to chick lit to sacred texts, Ng Yi-Sheng gives us five picks for Black History Month that speak across time and space to the present day.

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Jee KohFebruary 28, 2025Ng Yi-ShengComment
Adam and Eve as the First Horror Story
Adam and Eve as the First Horror Story

What is it that the snake actually says to Eve? A new story by Levi Abadilla.

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FictionJee KohFebruary 28, 2025Levi AbadillaComment
“An Alley in Baka” and other poems
“An Alley in Baka” and other poems

Three poems from Jerusalem speak to the power of vulnerability – shedding “camouflage” for skin. By Atar Hadari.

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PoetryJee KohFebruary 14, 2025Atar J. HadariComment
The Number Death
The Number Death

How far would you go to avoid bad luck? Read the new story by Melissa Ren to find out.

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FictionJee KohFebruary 7, 2025Melissa RenComment
Those Next-Door Neighbours on the Left
Those Next-Door Neighbours on the Left

Who are those next-door neighbors on the left? Why won’t they have anything to do with us? A campus story by Mosa-ab Z. Mangurun.

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FictionJee KohJanuary 31, 2025Mosa-ab Z. MangurunComment
#YISHREADS January 2025
#YISHREADS January 2025

On the cusp of the Year of the Snake, Ng Yi-Sheng reviews five works of speculative fiction that trace the journeys of the Chinese diaspora from Singapore to Canada.

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ReviewJee KohJanuary 31, 2025Ng Yi-ShengComment
The Indian Way of Seeing
The Indian Way of Seeing

What does V. S. Naipaul mean when he describes the Indian way of seeing as defective? Utkarsh Adhrit finds the answer in Naipaul himself in this essay about embarrassment, colonialism, and history.

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EssayJee KohJanuary 24, 2025Utkarsh AdhritComment
Violent Winter with the Family
Violent Winter with the Family

The violence of unwanted motherhood. Elise J. Choi reviews Lojman, by Ebru Ojen.

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ReviewJee KohJanuary 17, 2025Elise J. ChoiComment
“He knows you're here for the young Filipinas" and Other Poems
“He knows you're here for the young Filipinas" and Other Poems

With his poems on consumption and fear, Christian Hanz Lozada lays out a powerful three-course meal using ingredients from a caged crocodile, an insulted street food vendor, and a supermarket aisle.

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PoetryJee KohJanuary 17, 2025Christian Hanz LozadaComment
Overnight
Overnight

A relationship with an electric character lands a university student into a startling new world in which the typical rules don't apply, in this story from Michael Balili.

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FictionJee KohJanuary 10, 2025Michael BaliliComment
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About
Singapore Unbound

A transnational literary organization based in New York City, Singapore Unbound envisions and works for a creative and fulfilling life for everyone through the arts and activism.

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