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- 莎喲娜啦 · 再見
- 莫言
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- 走著瞧——香港新銳作者六人合集
- 走過愛的蠻荒
- 越娟
- 跟著寶貝兒走
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- 這一切都是幻覺
- 通往天國的階梯
- 通往天國的階梯:地球編年史第二部
- 遊戲自黑暗
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- 那些乘客教我的事
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- 都是你教的
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- 飛踢,醜哭,白鼻毛:第一次開出版社就大賣 騙你的
- 食字餐桌
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- 齊格蒙·包曼
- 龍應台
唯實求是 堅持真理-我的父親蔣南翔◎延佳(簡體書)
平常價 $38.00內容簡介
蔣南翔是中華人民共和國成立後清華大學任職時間最長的校長,並曾在「文革」前後分別擔任高等教育部長、教育部長。本書以子女視角,回顧蔣南翔唯實求是、為真理奮鬥的人生軌跡,以及他對新中國教育事業的開拓與創新探索。
編者簡介
延佳,1951年生於北京。國中畢業後下鄉插隊近五年,曾在農村民辦學校任教。1977年畢業於北京外國語學院德語專業,1981年獲中國社會科學院研究生院經濟學碩士學位。研究生畢業後,曾先後在中國社會科學院經濟研究所及政府綜合部門工作。已退休。
__________
ISBN:978-981-94-2149-7
出版社:東嶺出版
出版日期:2025年6月
建議分類:人物傳記、回憶錄、教育
頁數:372頁

Silk, Silver, Spices, Slaves: Lost Tales from the Philippine Colonial Period◎Lio Mangubat
平常價 $20.00About the Book
A country’s history is like a jigsaw puzzle. The bigger picture of how a country and its people came to be can be pieced together through multiple narratives, perspectives, and stories. In Silk, Silver, Spices, Slaves, Lio Mangubat reaches back into the depths of colonial archives and brings to life long-lost stories that would otherwise have been footnotes in Philippine history.
Featuring 13 essays inspired by his podcast series The Colonial Dept., Mangubat spins tales of galleons, triads, fickle spirits, long-lost maps, and the secret history of otters. In these pages, learn about how the entire country became mad for baseball; how Mexican fighter pilots flew dangerous missions over the Philippines during World War II; or how American occupiers fell victim to a mysterious illness called “Philippinitis".
Beyond revisiting days gone by, Mangubat also connects the threads of each story to the wider tapestry of world history — and how these can unspool even up to our current time. A masterful storyteller and podcaster, he proves that the past can loom larger than the present.
Praise for Silk, Silver, Spices, Slaves
"Mangubat appears, more than anything, deeply invested in cultivating a joyful exploration of the country’s past."
Mekong Review
"Mangubat links past and present, knows a good character when he sees one, and writes engagingly .... Short-story collections are often a prelude for something longer: perhaps Mangubat can be the one to write a Filipino history that resonates with a wider English-speaking public. Silk, Silver, Spices, Slaves is proof that there’s more than enough material."
Asian Review of Books
"We are, all of us, made of stories, Mangubat reminds us. Our families’ and individual lives’ tales are irremovable from the tidal wave of local and global stories. No story is too small, no person too inconsequential, as we all have parts to play in the never-ending drama of nation building."
Ex Libris Philippines
"For all intents and purposes, every chapter of Silk, Silver, Spices, Slaves is a masterclass in RRL (Review of Related Literature)-writing, with Mangubat normalizing the practice for an enriched hold of history.While we see the same technique in the succeeding chapters, every page always surprises us as the author turns something we already know into its head and digs deep into the recesses of the past."
Esquire Philippines
"Philippine history is bursting at the seams with politics, intrigue, and momentous events. With thousands of islands and several entry points serving as bases for business and exchange, there's no doubt these exchanges have resulted in byproducts that have left a mark on the culture. Author Lio Mangubat's podcast-turned-book Silk, Silver, Spices, Slaves mines these many cross-cultural meetings and engagements to make unraveling the archipelago's past one entertaining ride."
SPOT.ph
"Silk, Silver, Spices, Slaves tackles a wide range of topics, some peculiar and others a marvel to ponder."BusinessWorld
About the Author
Lio Mangubat is the creator of Philippine history podcast The Colonial Dept., which features long-lost stories from the country's past under Spanish, British, American, and Japanese rule. He is currently editor in chief of publishing house Summit Books, and is based in Manila. Follow him on Instagram at @liomangubat and @thecolonialdept.

Signals in the Noise: Notes on Penang, Malaysia and the World◎Ooi Kee Beng
平常價 $28.00About the Book
Malaysia is no easy country to analyse, or even to understand. With so many narratives about the country, its peoples, and its histories, the noise generated — both online and off — can be as deafening as that of any rave party.
Since 2019, Malaysians have lived through a unique period in the country’s history. Amid the Covid pandemic and its many challenges, Malaysia experienced three prime minister changes, and countless other political dramas and plot twists.
Signals in the Noise is not just a book on politics, though. Moving with ease between different sociopolitical and socioeconomic discourses, this collection of Ooi Kee Beng’s columns and commentaries — published between 2019 and 2023 — showcases more than ever his talent as a historian and philosopher, alongside his prowess as a political scientist. This wide-ranging collection is a must-read beginner's guide to Malaysian politics. It also highlights Ooi’s love for his hometown of Penang, his concern for the environment, and how the arts define a society and its perceptions of the world.
About the Author
Dato’ Dr Ooi Kee Beng is Executive Director of Penang Institute. He entered think tank work in 2004 and was Deputy Director of Singapore’s ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute in 2011-2017, where he remains attached as Visiting Senior Fellow. His homepage can be found at wikibeng.com.

The Story Game◎Shze-Hui Tjoa
平常價 $30.00About the Book
In the humid dark of a eucalyptus-scented room, a woman named Hui lies on a mattress telling stories about herself to her listener, a little girl. She talks about her identity as the child of an immigrant, her feelings about being in a mixed-race marriage, her opinions on mental health. But as her stories progress, it becomes clear a volatile secret lurks beneath their surface. There are events in Hui’s past that have great significance for the person she’s become, but that have gone missing from her memory. What is it, exactly, that is haunting Hui? Who is the little girl she talks to? And who is Hui herself?
As the conversation continues, what unfolds is a breathtaking, unexpected journey through layers of story toward truth and recovered identity; a memoir that reenacts, in tautly novelistic fashion, the process of healing that author Shze-Hui Tjoa moved through to recover memories lost to complex PTSD and, eventually, reconstruct her sense of self. Stunning in its originality and intimacy, The Story Game is a piercing tribute to selfhood and sisterhood, a genre-shattering testament to the power of imagination, and a one-of-a-kind work of art.
Praise for The Story Game
"A unique memoir that constantly undermines and reworks itself as it braids together episodes from the author's life, a destabilising approach that calls into question how accurately we can remember the past while we are still processing it."
Jeremy Tiang, writer and translator
Reading The Story Game is nothing short of an immense privilege. Shze-Hui Tjoa writes with her heart on her sleeve and the sanctity of her soul risked on every page. I wish every writer could pay testament to life—and our tricky relationship to the writing of life—the way she has done so earnestly, thoughtfully and playfully here.
Daryl Qilin Yam, writer, editor and author of Be Your Own Bae
Shze-Hui Tjoa has written a book that understands that stories are built out of erasure and silence, but they are also made from a relentless belief in transformation. To tell the story, again. And maybe this time, we might finally reveal what is hidden, even from ourselves. What a beautiful, brave act this book is of reclaiming, forgiving but also of un-naming. Sometimes stories teach us to say yes. This one reminds me we can also say No.
Lawrence Ypil, author of The Experiment of the Tropics
The Story Game is a truly inventive memoir told in the form of autobiographical essays that ask what it means to be political in body and mind while aspiring to always be more than we are. Nothing is as it seems in this memoir that’s both reflexive and reflective, and Shze-Hui Tjoa’s careful excavation of disembodiment’s nature knits together the very mind-body separation her memoir interrogates in a journey of healing that will have the reader questioning the narratives we cling to in order to survive. What emerges is an act of courage, confrontation, and intimacy rendered in beautiful, lucid prose.
Jemimah Wei, author of The Original Daughter
About the Author
Shze-Hui Tjoa is a Singaporean writer who lives in Edinburgh, UK. Her debut, The Story Game, was named a best nonfiction book of 2024 by Electric Literature and Paste Magazine when it was first published in the US and Canada. Shze-Hui is an editor at Guernica and Adi Magazine. Her writing has received support from arts organisations in the US, Portugal, Singapore, and Morocco. You can read her author interviews and find out more about her creative philosophy via her website, www.tjoashzehui.com.

【預購】戰爭沒有女人的臉(2015諾貝爾文學獎得主首部作品,出版四十周年紀念新版)◎斯維拉娜‧亞歷塞維奇(譯者:呂寧思)
平常價 $49.00這是女人走向戰場的故事,那裏有女人自己的色彩、氣息,與解讀,還有情感空間……
◎特別邀請鄭芳婷副教授(台灣大學台灣文學研究所)全新專文導讀
◎2015年諾貝爾文學獎得主赤色百科烏托邦系列作首部曲
◎作品授權超過五十個國家、翻譯成40種以上語言
◎俄文直譯繁中版,吳佳靜老師(政大斯拉夫語系)審訂
◎台灣版限量作者封面印簽
本次紀念新版調整
1. 新增收錄諾爾貝文學獎得獎致詞摘錄
2. 新增台大台文所鄭芳婷副教授二〇二四再版導讀
3. 參照白羅斯大使館聲明,將舊版書中出現的「白俄羅斯」一詞改為「白羅斯」
二戰期間,蘇聯曾發動近百萬名女性上戰場,過去所有被認為是男性的崗位都有她們的身影,舉凡狙擊手、砲兵、坦克兵、游擊隊、空軍飛行員等,不單只有我們習以為常中的後勤、醫護人員,然而這些身影在戰爭中失去了女性的面孔,戰爭結束後這些女性又陷入長達四十年的沉默⋯⋯
█關於女人走向戰場的故事
作為二戰勝利者的後代,戰爭書寫對於亞歷塞維奇這些曾經的蘇聯人來說並不陌生,然而,一直以來書寫戰爭的作品這麼多,她為何還要繼續寫?關於戰爭的一切, 我們大都是從男人口中得知,我們被男人對戰爭的理解、感受所俘虜,連在討論戰爭時使用的語言也是男人的。亞歷塞維奇想問,爲什麼女人不能捍衛自己的歷史,自己的語言和感情?戰後過了數十年,這些女人的戰爭仍舊不為人知,因此,這就是她所想書寫,關於女人走向戰場的故事。
█耗時多年,歷經數百位訪談,以及審查部門的阻擋
本書是2015年諾貝爾文學獎得主亞歷塞維奇的「赤色百科」烏托邦系列之一,以她承自俄羅斯口述傳統,介於報導文學與散文之間的「文獻文學」新體裁,將多人的獨白集結起來,譜出一首首眾聲喧譁式的複調音樂;自己則相對隱身在這些受訪者的聲音之下,將訪談資料裁減與組織,並且放入自己的提問與思考,藉由當事人的集體見證和現身,還原她理解中的真實。然而,耗時多年,歷經數百位訪談下,這些作品一度無法出版,遭到不少出版社的拒絕,甚至遭遇審查部門的刪改,直到戈巴契夫開始改革後, 才付梓出版,當時印刷量高達兩百萬冊。而在同一時間,隨著書的出版,她收到了大量信件,來自更多渴求訴說、被聽見的女性,終於,這些聲音找到了出口。本書另有收錄當時審查部門刪改的內容摘錄,以及作者與審查官的對話。
█寫戰爭,更是寫人
這不是一部關於女英雄的歷史,也不是在歌頌國家勝利的作品,亞歷塞維奇猶如靈魂的史學家,將書寫著墨在人的心靈與精神上去反思這究竟是一場什麼樣的戰爭,歷經過戰場的女人,是些什麼樣的人,她們又如何理解自己經驗的一切。這是蘇聯在二戰勝利國敘事下的另一種聲音,這些女人活過兩場戰爭,先是槍林彈雨的戰場,接著是回到日常受困女性傳統框架的戰場,戰爭從來沒有遠離過她們;無論是被看作在前線勾引男人的蕩婦,或是因為會想起血的氣味、死亡的模樣而對任何紅色物品感到恐懼,還是那在訪談前後反覆不定,有時陷入自我審查而不斷推翻,無法輕易說出口的真實。
◆「赤色百科」烏托邦系列五部曲 ◆
本書是烏托邦系列五部曲中的首部曲,此系列為亞歷塞維奇耗時數十年,訪談超過千人所寫下的「蘇聯」人聲紀錄,內容橫跨二戰、蘇聯對阿富汗戰爭、車諾比事件至蘇聯解體,留下這段長達七十多年的歷史見證。在書中,讀者能夠看見一場社會主義實驗的理想與殞落,以及遭國家忽略的小人物集體現身。五部曲依照原文出版時間分別為:《戰爭沒有女人的臉》、《我還是想你,媽媽》、《鋅皮娃娃兵》、《車諾比的聲音》、《二手時代》。
各界推薦(依姓氏筆畫排序)
王文靜/前商周集團執行長
王聰威/小說家
王薇君/中華民國兒童權益促進協會創會理事長
冬陽/小說書評人
吳玉山/中研院院士、中研院政治所特聘研究員
吳維寧/以色列自由作家
何飛鵬/城邦出版集團首席執行長
李彥龍/中山女高退休歷史教師
東年/小說家
阿潑/文字工作者
南方朔/文化評論人
胡淑雯/作家
胡慕情/鏡文學文化組採訪主任
郝譽翔/台北教育大學語創系教授、作家
陳仁姮/俄羅斯聖彼得堡大學歷史學博士、陽明交通大學通識中心副教授
陳文茜/文茜的世界周報主持人
陳宜倩/世新大學性別研究所教授
陳明莉/世新大學性別研究所副教授
陳昭珍/台灣師範大學圖書資訊學研究所名譽教授
陳祺勳/個人意見部落格格主
陳樂融/作家、主持人
陳穎青/資深出版人
郭強生/作家、教授
張正/燦爛時光東南亞主題書店負責人
張亦絢/作家
張翠容/香港新聞工作者
張鐵志/文化與政治評論作家
莊德仁/台灣師範大學歷史博士、建國中學歷史教師
馮喬蘭/人本教育基金會執行長
游美惠/高雄師範大學性別教育研究所教授
黃益中/熱血公民教師、《思辨》作者
葉大華/監察委員
詹宏志/作家、網路家庭董事長
蔣亞妮/作家
鄭芳婷/台灣大學台灣文學研究所副教授
蔡詩萍/台北文化局局長
蔡英文/中研院研究員
蔡康永/主持人、作家
歐茵西/台灣大學外文系退休教授
劉心華/政治大學斯拉夫語文系教授
蕭道中/輔仁大學歷史系副教授
賴盈銓/政治大學斯拉夫語文系退休教授
薛化元/政治大學台史所教授
蘇淑燕/淡江大學俄文系副教授
國際好評
「她的書具有危險的力量,記錄著二十世紀的暴力、愚蠢與殘酷,毫無冷場。」
——德國國家廣播電台
「亞歷塞維奇為歷史中的灰色地帶舉起一盞明燈。」
——瑞典赫爾辛伯格日報
「那有如複調音樂般的作品,為當代世人的苦難與勇氣樹立了一座紀念碑。」
——二〇一五諾貝爾文學獎
1948年生,記者出身。父親是白羅斯人,母親是烏克蘭人。2015年獲得諾貝爾文學獎。
因為作品在國內被禁,電話被竊聽,被禁止參加任何公開活動,因此她2000年離開家鄉,受國際避難城市聯盟協助流亡歐洲其他國家。她於2011年曾回到白羅斯居住,其後又因為參與白羅斯民主抗爭活動,反對統治近三十年的白羅斯總統盧卡申科,而在2020年必須再次離開家鄉;即使如此,她仍心繫著這片土地上發生的一切。
其作品以新文體寫成,此為諾貝爾文學獎從未出現過的體裁。這樣的寫作技巧,來自俄國口述傳統。讓世人得以看見映射眾多情感的世界,透過拼貼許多聲音,使作品介於報導文學與散文之間,是一種記錄真相的文獻文學。
她每部作品都花費數年書寫,訪問數百人,對象跨越數個世代,從1917年到今天。可說是關於蘇維埃靈魂的長篇史詩。其描繪的人性拼圖和提出的問題,使其作品不僅是關乎蘇聯而是甚至於全體人類。
除了2015年諾貝爾文學獎與1999年赫爾得獎,其作品獲獎無數,《戰爭沒有女人的臉》獲得2011波蘭安格魯斯中歐文學獎、2011波蘭理查德‧卡布辛斯基獎報導文學類。《車諾比的聲音》獲得2005全美書評人協會獎、1996瑞典筆會圖霍爾斯基獎。《二手時代》獲得2013法國文學界四大獎──法國梅迪奇獎散文類、2013德國藝文界最高榮譽──德國書商和平獎。
相關著作:《戰爭沒有女人的臉(2015諾貝爾文學獎得主首部作品,出版四十周年紀念新版)》、《我還是想你,媽媽(2015諾貝爾文學獎得主作品,出版四十周年紀念新版)》 、《鋅皮娃娃兵:聆聽死亡的聲音(華文世界唯一俄文直譯,完整典藏版)》、《車諾比的聲音:來自二十世紀最大災難的見證(首次完整俄文直譯,台灣版特別收錄核災30周年紀實攝影)》、《二手時代(2015諾貝爾文學獎得主獲獎之作,長銷精裝典藏版)》
譯者簡介
呂寧思
1955年生於瀋陽,現為香港鳳凰衛視資訊台執行總編輯、副台長,南京大學客座教授、西華大學客座教授。為復旦大學歷史系學士、華東師範大學俄羅斯文學碩士、澳洲雪梨大學亞洲研究博士。曾擔任記者、節目主持人。

Patient History◎Tricia Tan
平常價 $18.00"The poems in Patient History navigate a mother's illness through lush imagery and aquarium mind. The poems are also unafraid to refract illness and memory through different forms... in Patient History, the cataloguing of beautiful images acts as question marks to an uncertain mind, and the uncertainty amidst illness." —Victoria Chang, author of The Trees Witness Everything; Dear Memory: Letters on Writing, Silence, and Grief; and Obit
“Patient history” is a medical term describing the method by which doctors gather information about a patient’s past and present conditions. Yet, how much of a patient’s history do doctors really know, and how much agency do we have in determining our own histories?
Patient History is a whimsical exploration of the typically grim world of sickness and death. Woven from pop culture, fairytales, and East-meets-West childhood memories of growing up in Singapore, these fantasies are cotton candy sweet—osteoporosis becomes Singapore’s signature Chili Crab, a fistula transfigures into fairy, and organs are commemorated as a theme park.

Shezlez the Self-Proclaimed◎Marko Vignjević
平常價 $21.00Shezlez the Self-Proclaimed is an absurdist story about a poor man’s ambition to organise his own political party in an unnamed country characterised by moral apathy, poverty and heartless bureaucracy. Upon his first speech, so rousing as to attract the attention of the Progressive Party, Shezlez finds himself embroiled in a corrupt scheme of deceit and backstabbing in the leadup to the upcoming mayoral elections. A Machiavellian tale of political ambition, Shezlez the Self-Proclaimed examines the fickleness of loyalty, and interrogates the perennial question of whether the pursuit of power, no matter how idealistic its genesis, can ever remain a noble quest.

After the Inquiry (Second Edition)◎Jolene Tan
平常價 $21.00Police sergeant Hafiz lies in a coma after a gunshot to the head. The investigation by Internal Affairs uncovered a game of Russian roulette gone wrong, and the case is now closed. But there are rumbles of concern in the Ministry, and middle-aged civil servant Boon Teck—assisted by young colleague Nithya—is dispatched to take another look.
Suffused with mystery and intrigue, After the Inquiry steps into the mirror maze of Singapore’s bureaucracy, where silvered surfaces hide troubling secrets, and those who search for the truth risk getting lost…
“Exceptional... an unsettling insight into bureaucratic cruelty, and the best thing I've read from Singapore for years and years.”
—Peter Guest, Acting Business Editor, WIRED

catskull◎Myle Yan Tay
平常價 $27.00
Winner, Book of the Year & Best Literary Work, Singapore Book Awards 2024
Ram has been ignored and dismissed his entire life. His parents patronise him, his older brother belittles him, his class pretends he doesn’t exist, and he is certain he will fail his impending A-Levels. The only good part of his life is Kass, a fellow outsider he has known since childhood. But when the bruises on Kass from her abusive father get worse and worse, Ram decides to don a mask and frighten him into changing his ways. After his scare tactic goes fatally wrong, the mask he wore calls out to him again to clean the city's filth.
Neo-noir thriller meets coming-of-age mystery, catskull explores the violence inherent in an unforgiving city and what it does to the people who inhabit it. It complicates questions of what is right, what is lawful, and who pays the price in the quest for justice.
"Myle Yan Tay’s debut novel is a sharp, dark look at the education system as a potential site of violence and harm. This is writing that doesn’t flinch and dares the reader to sit with and in discomfort while excavating deeply existential questions about what defines who we are as a society and the individuals who build (or break) it."
—Pooja Nansi, Author of We Make Spaces Divine
This book contains references to topics such as physical violence, racially insensitive language, discrimination and abuse of migrant workers, and themes of sexual assault, sexual abuse and paedophilia. While the content of this novel is fictional, these topics reflect real issues.
We recognise that the ways in which readers might respond to and deal with these issues may vary, as our relationships to these topics are unique. If you find yourself feeling overwhelmed or not in the right headspace to experience the story, do put the book down and talk to someone about how you feel, or consult resources printed at the back of the book.

The Gods Will Hear Us Eventually◎Jinny Koh
平常價 $24.00When 7-year-old Anna told a lie to get out of trouble, she didn’t expect her older sister to go missing. Faced with her mother’s wrath and riddled with guilt, Anna tries to make amends as she grapples with the aftermath of her actions.
Until her daughter’s body is found, Su Lai refuses to believe that she has simply disappeared. Turning to a medium as her obsession to find her daughter escalates, the family is sucked into a web of pain and deceit that forces them to confront their own measures of loss. A masterful debut by Jinny Koh, The Gods Will Hear Us Eventually boldly interrogates the extent of familial love and expectation while unravelling the complexities of hope and redemption.

Heartland◎Daren Shiau
平常價 $24.00Hailed as “the definitive Singaporean novel”, this new edition of Heartland is accompanied by a new preface by author Daren Shiau and a publisher’s foreword that contextualises the novel’s imprint on the Singapore literary landscape since its first publication in 1999.
An iconic work, Heartland explores the paradox of rootedness and rootlessness in fast-changing Singapore. Set in the early 1990s, the novel follows the years of Wing Seng as he leaves school and is conscripted into full-time National Service. As Wing tries to reconcile his past with his future amid transitions through different phases of life, he finds meaning in his intense attachment to his surrounding landscape. Yet, as relationships and the years slip by, Wing is forced to question his own certainties and the wisdom of the people he values.
Set in Singapore’s heartland at the turn of the century, Heartland’s capturing of the texture of everyday life provides the backdrop essential to the bildungsroman’s exploration of identity, belonging and connection in an increasingly urbanised Singapore.

Dream Storeys◎Clara Chow
平常價 $21.00What if you could dream up any building you like? What would it be? How would constructing it change our lives?
A shopping mall self-destructs, and a single mother vanishes. A tree house for orphans and old folks is torn apart by an act of mercy. The Singapore Flyer is reinvented as a political prison. In this collection of nine tales, Clara Chow examines an alternative Singaporean landscape—one that exists only on paper—and the people we might be in it. A former newspaper correspondent, she interviews nine architects about chimeric structures and sets short stories in them. A hybrid of journalism and fiction, Dream Storeys documents the voices of urban visionaries, while taking their ideas into inventive, evocative new territories.
Architects featured
Yen Yen Wu • Chang Jiat-Hwee • Nirmal Kishnani • Lai Chee Kien • Michael Leong • Mark Wee • Olivia Tang • Joshua Comaroff • Tan Kok Hiang

Malay Sketches◎Alfian Sa’at
平常價 $26.00Longlisted for the 2013 Frank O'connor International Short Story Award
Malay Sketches is a collection of stories that borrows its name from a book of anecdotes by colonial governor Frank Swettenham, describing Malay life on the Peninsula. In Alfian Sa’at’s hands, these sketches are reimagined as flash fictions that record the lives of members of the Malay community in Singapore. With precise and incisive prose, Malay Sketches offers the reader profound insights into the realities of life as an ethnic minority.

Corridor: 12 Short Stories◎Alfian Sa’at
平常價 $22.00Corridor is a collection of short stories all set in present-day Singapore. With unsentimental clarity and heartbreaking honesty, Alfian Sa’at writes about HDB dwellers – students, housewives and factory workers, whose lives begin to unravel once they discover that happiness is a fragile thing in a country obsessed with progress and success.
The characters in each story find themselves in situations that offer them a ticket to hope and change: A video camera transforms the way a resentful daughter sees her widowed mother. A married couple receives free holiday tickets just when their luck seems to have run out. A girl encounters a transvestite on an MRT train ride who tells her that she looks like a famous singer. And a man enters a discotheque after a bitter divorce and re-learns the terror of falling in love all over again.
Rich in authentic detail, with a sensitive ear for the vernacular, Corridor paints an elegiac, revealing portrait of contemporary Singaporeans who exist along the city’s corridors – haunted by lost loves, irrevocable childhoods and a deep longing to be free.
Corridor won the Singapore Literature Prize Commendation Award in 1998.

In This Desert, There Were Seeds◎Jon Gresham, Elizabeth Tan (Editors)
平常價 $24.00Endangered tigers connecting telepathically through time-travel; a guard’s ethical dilemma at a history museum; a slaughterhouse worker’s memories of his dead wife; a monochrome town upended by a wild watermelon…
In This Desert, There Were Seeds is an intimate collection of past and future dreams, featuring exciting new and established literary voices from Western Australia and Singapore. From our shifting sense of community and identity, to our frustrations with existing political, social and economic structures—this anthology transcends boundaries and captures the persistence of ordinary lives in deserts literal and metaphorical.

Singa-Pura-Pura: Malay Speculative Fiction from Singapore◎Nazry Bahrawi
平常價 $22.00From a future of electronic doas and AI psychotherapists, sense-activated communion with forests and a portal to realms undersea, to a reimagined origin and afterlife—editor and translator Nazry Bahrawi brings together an exciting selection of never-before translated and new Malay spec-fic stories by established and emerging writers from Singapore.
Especially in an anglophone-dominated genre, very little of Malay speculative fiction from Singapore is known to readers here and beyond. Yet contemporary Bahasa literature here is steeped in spec-fic writing that can account as a literary movement (aliran)—and unmistakably draws from the minority Malay experience in a city obsessed with progress.

Nine Yard Sarees: a short story cycle◎Prasanthi Ram
平常價 $24.00Nine Yard Sarees is a multigenerational portrait of a fictional Tamil Brahmin family. Comprising eleven interlinked stories, this short story cycle traces the lives of nine women from 1950 all the way to 2019, shedding light on the community and its evolution through the decades. As the stories take us from India to Singapore, Australia and even America, we follow the experiences of the women in the family: Raji the matriarch who lives in seclusion at an ashram; her daughter Padma who struggles to raise her family the traditional way; Padma’s daughter Keerthana who is about to be married and don the nine yard saree, a symbol of womanhood. Tender, dynamic and full of heart, this cycle is a resonant portrayal of female solidarity and the complexities of the diasporic experience in contemporary Singapore.
“There is so much to appreciate in Prasanthi Ram’s debut collection, Nine Yard Sarees. As a portrait of a family, these stories connect to form a layered narrative about women, migration and identity. As a work of diaspora fiction about the Tamil-Brahmin community in Singapore, these connecting stories comment on questions of belonging and the pertinent tension between tradition and modernity. Ram writes with precision and clarity about this family while also treating the characters with the warmth and compassion that they deserve. Shifting narrative perspectives and covering a wide landscape of time and geographic space, Nine Yard Sarees confronts diaspora in all its complexity. A thoroughly enjoyable and meaningful work of fiction about family, community and the reverberations of migration and displacement.”
—Balli Kaur Jaswal, Author of Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows
“The madisar, the eponymous nine-yard saree, weaves these stories together beautifully and artfully, these stories about Tamil Brahmin women living mostly in Singapore, but also living, in Prasanthi Ram’s deft, sensitive and humorous telling, in full, human complexity in their loves and hates, joys and sorrows, envies and regrets. Nine Yard Sarees is an uncommonly rich and precise debut, closely observed, magically empathetic and formally ambitious. If you love the stories of Jhumpa Lahiri and Alice Munro, you will love these stories.”
—Jee Leong Koh, Winner of the 2022 Singapore Literature Prize in English fiction
"A gripping, masterfully crafted work that is both haunting and comforting. I read it in one night."
—Akshita Nanda, co-winner of the 2020 Singapore Literature Prize in English Fiction
The following stories contain some references to sensitive topics which may warrant content notices:
Rakshasa—casteist rhetoric; fat phobic language
Agni’s Trials—sexual harrassment
The Perfect Shot—sexual assault
Nine Yard Sarees—racism; fat phobic language
Loose Threads—self-harm; pregnancy loss
In Her Graveyard, She Bloomed—homophobic language; pregnancy loss
Before the Rooster Calls—domestic abuse
While the content of these stories is fictional, these topics reflect real issues. We recognise that the ways in which readers might respond to and deal with these issues may vary, as our relationships to these topics are unique. If you find yourself feeling overwhelmed or not in the right headspace to experience the stories, do put the book down and talk to someone about how you feel.

Raffles Renounced: Towards a Merdeka History◎Alfian Sa’at, Faris Joraimi, Sai Siew Min (Editors)
平常價 $33.00Why did independent Singapore celebrate two hundred years of its founding as a British colony in 2019? What does Merdeka mean for Singaporeans? And what are the possibilities of doing decolonial history in Singapore? Raffles Renounced: Towards a Merdeka History presents essays by historians, literary scholars and artists which grapple with these questions. The volume also reproduces some of the source material used in the play Merdeka / 獨立 / சுதந்திரம் (Wild Rice, 2019). Taken together, the book shows how the contradictions of independent nationhood haunt Singaporeans' collective and personal stories about Merdeka. It points to the need for a Merdeka history: an open and fearless culture of historical reckoning that not only untangles us from colonial narratives, but proposes emancipatory possibilities.

Brown is Redacted: Reflecting on Race in Singapore◎Kristian-Marc James Paul, Mysara Aljaru, Myle Yan Tay (Editors)
平常價 $28.00Brown is Redacted: Reflecting on Race in Singapore responds to, expands on and questions what we think we know about the lived experiences of minority-raced people in Singapore. Inspired by Brown Is Haram, a performance-lecture on minority-race narratives staged at The Substation in 2021, this anthology reflects on how brownness is constructed, sidelined, but also celebrated in this nation-state. Through a combination of essays, academic works, poems, and stories by brown individuals, Brown is Redacted both attempts to and fails to create a singular brown experience. What this anthology does produce instead, is a moving and expressive work of solidarity and vulnerability.
"Brown is Redacted is an incredible and much-needed collection of work that challenges preconceived notions about state- and socially created categories. The works here interrogate the nature of identity, using the lenses of art, academia and personal experience and capturing the dreary pain of being othered as well as the powerful joy of being seen. The writers hold nothing back, offering their hurt, tenderly showcasing the beauty in the under-represented, and triumphantly celebrating individuality." —Akshita Nanda, co-winner of the Singapore Literature Prize in English Fiction
“Brown is Redacted, through its ambition and lyricism, liberates us from the multicultural straitjacket stitched in the 1960s. On every page is a voice that has risen from the interstices of overlapping traditions and generations. Together they lay bare the complexities of the brown experience: the rawness of the struggle, the absurdity of the ignorance, the radical agency of choice, the ecstasy of solidarity. We can transcend. To be brown in Singapore is to dance between anguish and joy.” —Sudhir Thomas Vadaketh, Editor-in-Chief, Jom

Making Kin: Ecofeminist Essays from Singapore◎Esther Vincent Xueming, Angelia Poon (Editors)
平常價 $28.00Making Kin: Ecofeminist Essays from Singapore contemplates and re-centres Singapore women in the overlapping discourses of family, home, ecology and nation. For the first time, this collection of ecofeminist essays focuses on the crafts, minds, bodies and subjectivities of a diverse group of women making kin with the human and non-human world as they navigate their lives.
From ruminations on caregiving, to surreal interspecies encounters, to indigenous ways of knowing, these women writers chart a new path on the map of Singapore’s literary scene, writing urgently about gender, nature, climate change, reciprocity and other critical environmental issues.
In a climate-changed world where vital connections are lost, Making Kin is an essential collection that blurs boundaries between the personal and the political. It is a revolutionary approach towards intersectional environmentalism.

Eating Chilli Crab in the Anthropocene◎Matthew Schneider-Mayerson
平常價 $26.00In this era of climate crisis, in which our very futures are at stake, sustainability is a global imperative. Yet we tend to associate sustainability, nature, and the environment with distant places, science, and policy. The truth is that everything is environmental, from transportation to taxes, work to love, cities to cuisine.
This book is the first to examine contemporary Singapore from an ecocultural lens, looking at the ways that Singaporean life and culture is deeply entangled with the nonhuman lives that flourish all around us. The authors represent a new generation of cultural critics and environmental thinkers, who will inherit the future we are creating today. From chilli crab to Tiger Beer, Changi Airport to Pulau Semakau, O-levels to orang minyak films, these essays offer fresh perspectives on familiar subjects, prompting us to recognise the incredible urgency of climate change and the need to transform our ways of thinking, acting, learning, living, and governing so as to maintain a stable planet and a decent future.

The Singapore I Recognise: Essays on home, community and hope◎Kirsten Han
平常價 $29.00Singapore is small, a complex country full of contradictions, inconsistencies and idiosyncrasies. Often held up as a model nation, we sometimes forget that Singapore is seen differently by different people. With a decade of activism and journalism experience, Kirsten Han reveals various aspects of her home country that don’t follow what many of us know as the conventional ‘Singapore Story’. The Singapore I Recognise is Kirsten’s reckoning with civil society’s experiences of Singapore, perspectives that are often unheard, or fall through the cracks. Through researched interviews and heartfelt reflections, Kirsten tells us how parts of Singapore are already moving towards communal care, solidarity, empowerment and hope. This is a resonant portrayal of home in the island city-state.
“If you live in Singapore, you know it is a place with more layers and complexities than meets the eye. Yet, it is not always possible to grasp what lies beneath the glossy stories of economic success, social harmony, and political stability. Kirsten Han’s book—part reflexive memoir, part incisive reporting—is an informative, nuanced, and deeply humane series of essays that helps us better understand and appreciate the contradictions, tensions, and power plays that are integral to the Singapore story. Read it to learn new things, read it to feel big emotions, read it to expand your thinking on the realities and possibilities of home.”
—Teo You Yenn, sociologist and author of This is What Inequality Looks Like
“When Kirsten Han sees something, she says something, especially when that something is an injustice that afflicts the weak in Singapore’s extremely privileged society. This book encapsulates the values she has fearlessly espoused for years, and for which she continues to pay a personal price. Unable to counter her arguments on the merits, the establishment has subjected her to smears and harassment. One day, her conscientious contributions will be lauded. Until then, Kirsten Han is the eye that too few in Singapore recognise. The country is blinder for it.”
—Cherian George, Author of Air-Conditioned Nation Revisited
This book contains descriptions of physical violence, mentions of incarceration and themes related to the death penalty, as well as references to arrests and interrogation. We recognise that the ways in which readers might respond to and deal with these issues may vary, as our relationships to these topics are unique. If you find yourself feeling overwhelmed, personally affected or unable to engage with this content at present, feel free to put this book down and talk to someone about how you feel, or consult the resources printed at the back.

The Sound of SCH: A Mental Breakdown, A Life Journey◎Danielle Lim
平常價 $20.00Can a life weave along through the same notes and yet come to play forth different sounds?
The Sound of SCH (pronounced S-C-H) is the true story of a journey with mental illness, beautifully told by Danielle Lim from a time when she grew up witnessing her uncle's untold struggle with a crippling mental and social disease, and her mother's difficult role as caregiver. The story takes place between 1961 and 1994, backdropped by a fast-globalising Singapore where stigmatisation of persons afflicted with mental illness nevertheless remains deep-seated. Unflinchingly raw and honest in its portrayal of living with schizophrenia, The Sound of Sch is a moving account of human resiliency and sacrifice in the face of brokenness.

Malayland◎Dina Zaman
平常價 $23.00What does it mean to be Malay in the 21st century? This question is especially relevant in a country like Malaysia, where identity politics is frequently highlighted and closely policed by the state. Sixteen years after the publication of I Am Muslim, Dina Zaman returns with her new memoir, Malayland, a reflection on what it means to be Malay and Muslim in 21st century Malaysia.
Dina embarked on Malayland during the Covid pandemic in an effort to understand the anger and frustrations of her fellow ethnic Malays who were fighting against enemies, real and imagined, and a new world order imposed by a virus that killed over seven million people globally. Growing up in a Malaysia where Malay anger seethed and bubbled under the many nightclubs in 1980s Malaysia–a time where secularism had putatively killed the Malay Muslim heritage–Dina traces the roots of contemporary radicalism to the 1998 Reformasi movement which set the nation on a new, more extremist path.
Today race and faith are discussed and embraced frenetically, where hateful extremism is hidden under the rhetoric of nationalism, where young Malaysians are zealously asserting their political and birth identities in social media. The sense of irony and humour that Malaysia was once known for is now perhaps irretrievably lost. Malayland is a reflective book: memories and flashbacks of a childhood filled with earthquakes, spooks and a sense of wonderment and curiosity about a country that is fighting for a desired identity.
About the Author
Dina Zaman is a Kuala Lumpur-based writer and researcher. She is the co-founder of IMAN Research, a think tank focusing on socio-political and security matters, and a founding member of the Southeast Asian Women Peacebuilders. She has written extensively for the Malaysian media and is a contributor to The Jakarta Post. Her latest passion projects revolve around Terengganu Royal History. Dina is the author of three non-fiction titles – I am Muslim (Silverfish Publishing), Holy Men, Holy Women (SIRD) and Malayland(Ethos/Faction) – and King of the Sea (Clarity Publishing) her collection of short stories.

【預購】AI時代的超級老人:爸媽老後長照靠AI,未來的你安心變老◎平松類(譯者:彭佳)
平常價 $31.00你或父母是否有這些擔憂?

海,吃人魚與吃它的人◎語凡(簡體)
平常價 $20.00內容簡介
這是一部書寫海的詩,從海出發有沙灘、船、魚海浪、島嶼、水手等意象的描寫。再從那裡衍生出更多的想像,有貓、有魚骨頭、有孩子、企鵝、人和城市。我們的一輩子和海有多少交集,請你在這本詩集耐心尋找。
作者簡介
語凡,原名曾國平,新加坡文藝協會副會長,《新加坡文藝報》主編,已出版9本詩集、1本散文詩集、1本散文集,曾獲得新加坡文學獎(詩)、方修文學獎(詩)、金筆獎(短篇小說)、《源》雜誌2023年優秀文學作品(短篇小說)獎、台灣時報文學獎(詩)、台灣現代詩五週年詩獎正獎、第二屆陳讚一博士世界華文微型小說創作獎、全球華文文學星雲獎等。

Ownself Say Ownself: New & Selected Poems◎Joshua Ip
平常價 $28.00Ownself Say Ownself is a chaotic collection of new and selected poetry by Joshua Ip. Half of it is 44 poems salvaged from the award-winning, out-of- print wilderness of his first five-ish collections, marked-up with mischievous metric marginalia in the newly invented form of the tilde (tl;dr). The next half is 44 new translations, performance pieces and formal experiments written over the course of a practice research PhD. So you get the best of six-ish books for the price of one, which fortuitously sums to 88 poems.
See satirical singlish sonnets scrabble with spurned spoken word and shady pseudo-song-translations alongside snide summaries, split-screen cinemas, Song-dynasty susurrus, Scottish-civil-servant-salutations and circumlocutory sex scenes, in a singsong celebration of spurious sesquilinguality!

Singapore Is Still Not An Island◎Bilahari Kausikan
平常價 $36.00Retired Singapore diplomat Bilahari Kausikan gives his perspectives on regional and global developments that pertain to Singapore’s foreign policy.
A first collection of essays and public speeches, covering the period from Singapore’s independence in 1965 to 2017, was published under the title Singapore Is Not An Island. This second collection of articles and speeches builds on this and covers events up to 2023.
Sharing his strategic insights through various essays, talks and papers, Bilahari shows why and how Singapore and Asean should navigate the new strategic environment. Global and regional issues are examined through the realistic lens of Singapore’s foreign policy interests.
AUTHOR
BILAHARI Kausikan
Bilahari Kausikan is currently Chairman of the Middle East Institute, an autonomous institute of the National University of Singapore. He has spent his entire career in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. During his 37 years in the Ministry, he served in a variety of appointments at home and abroad, including as Ambassador to the Russian Federation, Permanent Representative to the UN in New York and as the Permanent Secretary to the Ministry. Raffles Institution, the University of Singapore and Columbia University in New York all attempted to educate him.
EDITOR
TAN Lian Choo
A former award-winning journalist with The Straits Times, Tan Lian Choo joined the Singapore Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1995, serving as then Ministry’s first Director of Public Affairs, Spokesperson for the Ministry and Press Secretary to the Foreign Minister. Her overseas diplomatic assignments included being Singapore’s Permanent Delegate to
Unesco in Paris (2007-2009), serving concurrently as Deputy Chief of Mission, Singapore Embassy in Paris (2006-2009). She was appointed Head of Mission, Singapore Embassy in Brasilia, Brazil (2012-2015). She retired from the Singapore Foreign Service in 2015.


