As always we managed to have one little disaster this Saturday (the usual anything that can go wrong manages to) , the microphone packed up but thankfully everyone read extra loudly and the audience huddled in close to listen.
Lawyer-by-day Jade-Yi Lo had the unenviable task of reading first. Jade attended my creative writing class and is a new writer absolutely hungry to write and very hard working. The story she'd shared with us on the last night of the class, The Girl with Red Ruby Shoes, was such so magical, I invited her to read in front of the crowd at Seksan's. She'd reworked the story, and even though I knew the ending, it still kicked me in the stomach.

Lee Eeleen's story Scenes From The Shopping Complex appears in the Urban Odysseys collection. It is a beautifully observed piece about the nightmare of a weekend family trip to the shopping mall and the politics of family life. Much of it is written like a film script, and I particualrly love the delicious counterpoint between the supermarket soundtrack of James Dobson's Focus on the Family (which yes, for some reason really does get played ad nauseam in supermarkets here) and the reality of shopping with kids. Great comedy.
Shih-Li Kow read her shortest story Let the Bird Sing from her new collection Ripples. A small bird sits on the windowsill of a dying man and the two are locked into one final adversarial battle. It's one of the more surreal pieces in the book - an excellent piece of micro-fiction.
Thanks to all who came (including quite a number of new people who I hope will find their way again), to all who read, to Shahril Nizam for the blog poster, to Seksan for his inspiring space, to the guys from MPH in Bangsar Village for bringing over books to sell, to Eugene and friends who cleared up, and to Reza in advance for fixing the microphone ...
See you all later in the month. I've fixed readings for March 28th (provided Seksan will have us) and have a great line-up already worked out. More about it later.
Sorry I'm late posting this - my photos weren't so good so I was waiting for someone to come up with some better ones and Tan May Lee came to my rescue! (The first three nice pics are hers, the last three not so nice pics are mine.)
9 comments:
I heard James "Hobson". :-)
maybe ... would need to check with her story. but hobson or dobson we know what she means, right?
thanks very much for coming
Just started Adeline's book; it's a hoot!
She reminds me of a Malaysian writer with the same initials, Adele Lim, who used to write a column in The Star and is now a Hollywood scriptwriter/producer.
I'm half way through the book, and I really love Adeline's voice :)
Ehhh... what's the punchline on Sheena's t-shirt?
The fourth one isn't bad.
But she doesn't seem to have teeth.
"The fourth one" is Bernice Chauly. I have no idea why she has such a magnetic presence, everyone says that.
She does have teeth, she reads the way everyone should read. Some people here prefer to be ventriloquists instead, and speak with their mouths almost closed. You never see their lips move, and you have to listen very hard to hear anything.
gnute - it says "racist" with just a very tiny brain!
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