- 新加坡出版 Singapore Publications
- 海外出版 Overseas Publications
- 詩 Poetry
- 散文 Essays, Non-Fiction
- 小說 Fiction, Novels
- 耽美 Boys' Love (BL)
- 雜誌 Magazines
- 評論/論文 Critics
- 文學與文化研究 Literary and Cultural Theories
- 生活哲學/勵志 Lifestyle & Self-help
- 同志主題與商品 Queer Titles & Merch
- 繪本/漫畫 Picture Books / Comics
- 兩性關係 Love & Relationships
- 親子關係 Parenting
- 其他 Others
- 005
- 006
- 126
- 127
- 128
- 129
- 130
- 131
- 1920s to 1930s
- 2015
- 50 Things to Love About Singapore
- 50首
- 9789671774519
- 9789810722029
- 9789810952136
- 9789811127663
- 9789811168956
- 9789811409462
- 9789811465901
- 9789811811050
- 9789811839047
- 9789811844461
- 9789811853760
- 9789811855863
- 9789811858581
- 9789811868665
- 9789811869488
- 9789811869495
- 9789811869983
- 9789811873683
- 9789811874567
- 9789811892103
- 9789811896521
- 9789811896989
- 9789811896996
- 9789811898310
- 9789812480118
- 9789812480149
- 9789812480194
- 9789812480248
- 9789812480279
- 9789812480347
- 9789812480569
- 9789812480613
- 9789812481948
- 9789814266512
- 9789814342094
- 9789814342193
- 9789814342261
- 9789814342292
- 9789814342414
- 9789814342513
- 9789814342582
- 9789814342780
- 9789814342803
- 9789814342827
- 9789814342872
- 9789814642149
- 9789814642521
- 9789814642583
- 9789814642590
- 9789814642651
- 9789814642668
- 9789814642675
- 9789814642736
- 9789814642767
- 9789814642866
- 9789814642880
- 9789814642972
- 9789814747509
- 9789814747516
- 9789814747523
- 9789814747561
- 9789814747714
- 9789814747776
- 9789814747783
- 9789814747790
- 9789814747936
- 9789814827294
- 9789814827348
- 9789814827485
- 9789814827546
- 9789814827751
- 9789814827966
- 9789814827997
- 9789814856959
- 9789814992442
- 9789814992459
- 9789814992466
- 9789814992473
- 9789814992480
- 9789814992534
- 9789814992541
- 9789814992558
- 9789814992565
- 9789815081015
- 9789815081138
- 9789864787753
- A British Serial Killer in Singapore
- A Hakka Woman's Singapore Stories
- A Luxury: Omnibus Edition
- A Tree To Take Us Up To Heaven
- a very curious cabinet
- After You
- AFTERIMAGE
- Alain Vandenborre
- Alfian Sa’at
- Alvin Pang
- Always Have Enough Money
- An Anthology of Poems based on Artworks from the National Gallery Singapore
- AN EPIC OF DURABLE DEPARTURES
- And The Walls Come Crumbling Down
- AND THE WALLS COME CRUMBLING DOWN (2ND EDITION)
- Annaliza Bakri
- Anything but Human
- ARIA AND TRUMPET FLOURISH
- art practices
- Asian kitchen
- Asian Larder
- Asian Larder: Asian Ingredients De-mystified
- Ask The Foodie
- Ask The Foodie - Kitchen Knowhow
- Back Alley
- Below: Absence
- Ben Nadarajan
- Benjamin Henry Sheares
- Betty Saw
- Betty Saw's Ultimate Herbal Cookbook
- biases
- Big Dreams
- Big Hearts
- Bilahari Kausikan
- Bilingual Edition
- Bodhi IA
- Can Singapore Survive?
- Can Singapore Survive? (New Updated Version)
- Capital Misfits
- Caroline Chia
- CATHY BIG
- Central Provident Fund schemes
- Chang Yang
- Cheat Sheet
- Checkpoint Theatre
- Cheong Koon Hean
- cheryl julia lee
- Chris Tan
- Christine Chia
- Christopher Tan Yu Wei
- Claudine Lim And Kathleen Yao
- Close Watch
- Close Watch : A Nation's Resolve To Secure Singapore
- comics
- common investment mistakes
- complex financial concepts
- consumer protection
- Contemporary Art
- Cook Mee
- cookbook
- corporate responsibility
- CPCLL
- CPF
- creative merchandise
- credit and debt planning
- CT Lim
- CV Devan Nair
- Cyril Wong
- Dad & Company
- Dana Lam
- Darren Soh
- Daryl Lim
- Daryl Lim Wei Jie
- decision-making
- Delicious Heirlooms 2
- DIPLOMACY: THE SINGAPORE EXPERIENCE (2ND EDITION)
- Doing Good Better: Choices and Paradigms in the Social Ecosystem
- Drawn to Satire. Sketches of Cartoonists in Singapore
- Early Hawkers in Singapore
- Edmund Lim
- enamel
- Entrepreneurs' Blueprint
- ethos books
- Everyday Modernism
- Fifty Secrets of Singapore's Success
- financial planning
- Focus Publishing
- Food Republic: A Singapore Literary Banquet
- Footnotes on Falling
- Forgotten Heritage: Uncovering Singapore's Traditional Chinese Puppets
- Francesca D'Orazio Buonerba
- From The Belly Of The Cat
- furoshiki
- Genevieve Wong
- George Jacobs
- Goh Eng Yeow
- Governing: A Singapore Perspective
- Government in Business
- Government in Business - Friend Or Foe? Finding Entry & Exit Points
- Grace Chia
- Guy Hoh
- Hornbill Eats Png Kueh
- Hunger Management
- Impressions of an Invasion: A Correspondent in Ukraine
- IN THIS TOGETHER: SINGAPORE’S COVID-19 STORY
- installation
- insurance planning
- Integrated Shield Plan
- investment
- investors
- It is only after noon
- ix shen
- Jafney Jaafar
- jargon
- Jason Wee
- Jeffrey Seow
- Jesvin Yeo
- Jiat-Hwee Chang
- Jon Gresham
- Jordan Melic
- Joshua Ip
- Jr.
- Julie Koh
- Just Good Food - Favourites from the East & West
- Justin Zhuang
- Kalimullah Hassan
- Kiran Narain
- Kishore Mahbubani
- Koh Hong Teng
- Kopi Otters at Sentosa
- Labrador Publishing House
- Lai Chee Kien
- Landmark Books
- Lee Kuan Yew
- Lee Kuan Yew: A Life In Pictures
- Lee Su Shyan
- Lee Wei Ling
- legacy planning
- Legend of the Laughing Buddha
- Leong Weng Kam
- Leslie Koh
- Lim Hwee Hua
- Linda Collins
- Lionel Yee
- Loh Hoong Kwan And Pauline Dawn Loh
- Lorna Tan
- loss adjustment
- Love and Life at the Gallery
- love food
- Majulah Moments
- Majulah Moments (Postcard Book)
- Malaysia & Singapore: The Land Reclamation Case
- Marc Bollansee
- Market Smart: How to Grow your Wealth in an Uncertain World
- market values in society
- Master Hsing Yun
- Math Paper Press
- max
- Mayura Mohta
- Melissa De Silva
- Melody Zaccheus
- Men in White
- merch
- merchandise
- Michael LEONG
- Money Smart: Own Your Financial Destiny
- Monumental Treasures: Singapore's Heritage Icons
- More Talk Money
- Mother Of All Questions
- Myna at Hawker Centre
- National Gallery Singapore
- National Heritage Board
- Neither Civil Nor Servant
- New Asian Traditions Vegetarian Cookbook
- Ng Keat Seng
- ng zheng wei
- Nirmal Ghosh
- nonprofit organisations
- NTUC
- NUS Press
- onerios
- Others' Is Not A Race
- OW KIM KIT
- Ow Yeong Wai Kit
- painting
- Pasta In A Wok
- Patrick Ting
- Pauline Dawn Loh
- Pause Narratives
- Peh Shing Huei
- Per Se
- Per Se Vol 1:Void Deck
- Per Se Vol 2: Back Alley
- personal finance
- personal finance guide
- photography and performance
- Playful Animals Tour SG
- Poon Yew Fai
- Postcats
- Postcats (Postcard Book)
- Presidents Series
- Proudly Singaporean
- recipe
- recipes
- Resurgent Indonesia From Crisis to Confidence
- Retire Smart: Financial Planning Made Easy
- retirement
- retirement planning
- Richard Lim
- Rodrigo Dela Peña
- Rojak City Pte. Ltd.
- Rosetta Cultures
- S Jayakumar
- Sally Lam
- sam
- satori blues
- savings
- sculpture
- Sea Breeze Books
- Sea Breeze Exclusive
- Sean Lam
- Sean Lam Studio
- Shaolin and You
- Short Tongue
- Show Me the Money
- Show Me the Money Book 2
- Show Me the Money Book 3
- Show Me the Money Book 4
- SIKIT-SIKIT LAMA-LAMA JADI BUKIT
- Singapore
- Singapore Book Council
- Singapore Is Not An Island
- Singapore Post
- Singapore Trails
- Singpaore
- Singpost
- Small Change
- Small Change Book 2
- Small States In A Big World : Size Is Not Destiny
- social ecosystem
- SOMEWHERE ELSE ANOTHER YOU
- Sonnets From The Sonnets
- Sonny Yap
- Soo Kok Leng
- Southeast Asian
- Southeast Asian Contemporary Art
- Sparrow on Vintage Mug
- Speak Cryptic
- Stephanie Ye
- stock
- stock investing
- Straits Times Press
- Sumiko Tan
- Sun Zi's Art of War
- Susan Amy
- Susan Long
- Sylvia Tan
- Tabby on SG Flat
- Tan Hsueh Yun
- Tan Ooi Boon
- Tania De Rozario
- tax planning
- Teh Hooi Ling
- TENDER DELIRIUM (3RD PRINTING)
- Teo Paulinrebecca and Lynne Tan
- Tham Wai Mun
- The Art of Being a Grandmother: An Incomplete Diary of Becoming
- The Heart Smart Oil Free Cookbook
- The IRAS Story
- The Law of Second Marriages
- The Malaysia That Could Be
- THE MONSTERS BETWEEN US
- The Nutgraf
- The Price of Being Fair: The FairPrice Group Story
- The Straits Times
- The Straits Times Team
- Think Wits Win
- Thinking Allowed?
- Tommy Koh
- Tony Tan
- Tony Tan Keng Yam: My Political Journey
- translations to the tanglish
- Travellution
- UNINTERRUPTED TIME
- University of Canberra
- Unmarked Treasure
- Unquiet Kingdom
- Unquiet Kingdom - Thailand in Transition
- Vasuki Shastry
- video
- Vintage Singapore - 1950s (Postcard Book)
- Vinyl
- Vinyl Waterproof Stickers
- VOID DECK
- volunteerism
- Wang Mun Kiat
- Warren Fernandez
- We R Family
- WE ROSE UP SLOWLY (2ND PRINTING)
- Werner Ko
- What Gives Us Our Names
- What Happened: Poems 1997-2017
- What's a Little Rain?
- Wholefood Kitchen
- Wholefood Kitchen - Naturally Nutritious Meals for a Healthy Lifestyle
- WhyNot
- Willie Cheng
- Wong Kim Hoh
- Words of Wisdom
- Your First Million
- Your First Million (Revised Edition)
- Yusof Ishak
- 㗝呸水獺聖淘沙
- 一个客家女子的新加坡故事
- 一人一半
- 一個像我這樣的男人
- 一個客家女子的新加坡故事
- 一首詩的時間
- 三十三間
- 三卷
- 三國演義
- 三國演義10
- 三國演義6
- 三國演義7
- 三國演義8
- 三國演義9
- 三度情
- 三輪車跑得快
- 不可思議的打印機
- 不可會意
- 不可預期
- 不存在的情人
- 不為什麼
- 世事任君談——報人生涯一得之愚
- 世事任君谈——报人生涯一得之愚
- 东岭出版
- 中國
- 中國大陸
- 中文譯本
- 中文译本
- 丹那美拉的潮聲
- 丹那美拉的潮聲:希尼爾微型小說與閃小說集
- 也許來世
- 也許明天
- 也許明天也許來世
- 书
- 五十首
- 亞太圖書
- 亞洲文學
- 亞非言
- 交替時刻
- 产业大亨
- 人文
- 人物傳記
- 人生就是最千奇百怪的小故事
- 他山之石
- 他山之石002
- 仙俠小說
- 以讀攻毒
- 伍政瑋
- 伍木
- 伸懒腰小姐
- 伸懶腰小姐
- 何奕愷
- 余廣達
- 佛教
- 你的名字是甜
- 佳慧
- 做人阿甲阿甲就好
- 做人阿甲阿甲就好:王沙和野峰的90個人生故事
- 偶爾月亮偶爾相忘
- 傳記
- 傷者
- 兒童繪本
- 兩岸研究
- 八方文化
- 八方文化創作室
- 公共管理
- 其他
- 冯啟明
- 冼文光
- 凝思集
- 凝思集 第二輯
- 前空姐的餐桌
- 創刊號
- 創意圈出版社
- 劇本
- 劉備三顧茅廬
- 劉宏
- 劉燕玲
- 劉碧娟
- 勵志
- 匠心逐夢
- 匠心逐夢 —— 範文瑂博士與全美世界
- 匠心逐梦
- 匠心逐梦 范文瑂博士与全美世界
- 华文
- 华文报历史
- 南洋公共管理研究生院
- 南洋大學漢學名師文選
- 南洋學會
- 南洋理工大學
- 卜卜生威
- 危險實驗
- 厚·重
- 去阿嬤家
- 友誼書齋
- 口述历史
- 口述歷史
- 古典
- 古典文學
- 只想和你去旅行
- 可愛喵皇上組屋
- 可愛貓
- 台灣
- 台灣人政治認同的轉變
- 吉打
- 同志
- 名創教育
- 名的起源 (WHAT GIVES US OUR NAMES)
- 吳慶康
- 吳承恩
- 吳柯妮
- 吳耀宗
- 吳韋材
- 周昭亮
- 周蘊儀
- 品印
- 哲學
- 唐山
- 商業理財
- 喧囂過後
- 四大名著
- 四方文創
- 回不去的候車站
- 圓滿
- 圖像詩
- 圖文書
- 圖片版
- 在商言商:郭令明
- 在商言商:郭令明◎白勝暉
- 地產業大亨
- 城市发展集团
- 城市書房
- 城市發展集團
- 外公的小房間
- 外文
- 多元文化
- 多元語言
- 多謝
- 大家出版
- 大家出版社
- 大禹治水的傳說
- 天微明時我是詩人
- 天微明時我是詩人:潘正鐳詩集
- 天毯
- 天毯:潘正鐳詩集
- 太陽正走過半個下午
- 女俠紅頭巾
- 女媧補天的神話
- 女媧造人
- 如最初的月光
- 媽媽的PSLE會考日記:一個小六女生的會考衝刺
- 季風帶
- 孤星子
- 學楓
- 學生小說
- 學術
- 宋子江
- 宗教
- 官渡之戰
- 家園何處是
- 寧寧遊新加坡河
- 寧寧遊甘榜
- 寫作與閱讀
- 專欄
- 尋找
- 小品文
- 小土
- 小寒
- 小熊的新衣
- 小說
- 小說選
- 小說集
- 小说
- 小販中心八哥客
- 小鄺
- 尤今
- 山海經神話故事1
- 山海經神話故事2
- 山海經神話故事3
- 山海經神話故事4
- 工院外史
- 左左和右右
- 左邊
- 巴別塔紀元
- 希尼爾
- 平價的代價
- 平價的代價——平價集團的故事
- 平裝
- 康妃書聲院
- 廣西師範大學出版社
- 弟喂
- 弟弟不要怕
- 張國強
- 張曦娜
- 從「中國人」到「臺灣人」
- 從膠園到國會
- 微型小說
- 微醺人生
- 忘了下山
- 快樂的藍色口罩
- 快樂的黃色氣球
- 情系狮城
- 情系狮城: 五十年新华诗文选
- 意识无限国际出版社
- 成君
- 我们――联合早报口述历史
- 我們――聯合早報口述歷史
- 我們不知道的歸類
- 我們繼續沉悶
- 我們遠行
- 我有一朵會下雪的雲
- 我沒有飼料喂你的鳥
- 我的班上來了個外星人
- 我與我自己的二三事
- 我要活下去
- 戰「疫」勇士——新加坡之道
- 戲服
- 手帕
- 抗疫小英雄
- 推廣華文學習委員會
- 搪瓷杯上小麻雀
- 放逐與追逐
- 政務部長
- 教學不易
- 教育
- 散文
- 散文集
- 文創
- 文創品
- 文學
- 文學島語
- 文學島語 005
- 文學島語 007
- 文學島語006
- 文學島語007
- 文學島語系列
- 文學雜誌
- 文論集
- 料理
- 新傳媒
- 新加坡
- 新加坡中學讀本
- 新加坡出版
- 新加坡华人的历史
- 新加坡华文出版
- 新加坡华文文学
- 新加坡南洋公共管理研究生院學員的20堂實境課
- 新加坡南洋理工大學
- 新加坡外文
- 新加坡學生文學讀本
- 新加坡文學
- 新加坡文藝協會
- 新加坡潮州八邑会馆
- 新加坡草地裡的男生
- 新加坡華人的歷史
- 新加坡華文出版
- 新加坡華文文學
- 新加坡藝人
- 新加坡貿工部兼文化、社區及青年部政務部長
- 新加坡雜誌
- 新文潮
- 新文潮出版社
- 新文潮文學社
- 新新頭家
- 新新頭家——致創業路上的你
- 新明日報
- 新華文學
- 於曉丹
- 施耐庵
- 旅者
- 旅行的困境
- 旅遊
- 旅遊指南
- 旭義公子
- 时光碎语
- 明信片
- 星空依然閃爍
- 星雲大師
- 時代印記
- 時代精神
- 時代精神書屋
- 時光碎語
- 晨爾工作室
- 暢遊行
- 暢遊行 Travellution
- 書
- 書衣
- 曹雪芹
- 曾國平
- 最後一期
- 會說話的肥貓
- 有時,我們遠行
- 本地
- 朱志偉
- 李俊賢
- 李光耀
- 李光耀的女儿
- 李光耀的女兒
- 李天葆
- 李氣虹
- 李玮玲
- 李瑋玲
- 李白
- 李白~長篇歷史小說(一套三卷盒裝)
- 李美花
- 李青松
- 杨荣文
- 杯盘狼藉
- 東嶺出版
- 林中子
- 林任君
- 林伟杰
- 林偉傑
- 林得楠
- 林海燕
- 林紋沛
- 梁文福
- 梁銘恩
- 楊木光
- 楊榮文
- 楊榮文 凝思集
- 歐筱佩
- 歷史
- 殭屍
- 比以前慢,比以後快
- 毛毛與矮矮
- 水滸傳
- 江夏二郎
- 江苏凤凰文艺出版社
- 江蘇鳳凰文藝出版社
- 汪來昇
- 決定
- 沈傾掞
- 沈璧浩
- 沈耀发
- 沈耀榮
- 沈耀發
- 沒變形記
- 洪偉喜
- 洪啟強、周偉隆、白正洋、林睿理、林棓舢
- 洪均榮
- 洪菁雲
- 流蘇
- 海外
- 海浪紅
- 海浪藍
- 海風書屋
- 消滅眾神
- 淡忘中的新加坡传统华族木偶戏
- 游以飄
- 游俊豪
- 湯圓人團圓
- 漫畫
- 潘正鐳
- 潘正鐳詩集
- 無指幸福
- 無法分類
- 焦點出版
- 燃燒的獅子
- 爬山的人
- 牛仔
- 狮城佛光
- 狮城佛光——新加坡佛教发展百年史
- 王惠琪
- 王慧清
- 王沙
- 王賡武
- 现代诗
- 玲子
- 玲子傳媒
- 珍多
- 現代小說
- 現代散文
- 現代詩
- 琺瑯
- 生活
- 生活哲學
- 用白紙做的小孩
- 畫室
- 當代文學
- 疫言2030
- 病例
- 白勝暉
- 白胜晖
- 盤古開天闢地的神話
- 目睹基輔之兵臨城下
- 目睹基辅之兵临城下
- 短篇小說
- 短舌
- 石頭
- 社會議題
- 秀威
- 秀實
- 科幻
- 科幻小說
- 穆軍
- 童書
- 笑吃
- 第1期
- 第2期
- 第3期
- 第5期
- 第6期
- 第7期
- 第一期
- 第一輯
- 第七期
- 第三期
- 第二期
- 第二緝
- 第五期
- 第六期
- 简体
- 簡體
- 簡體版
- 米米和他的正義團隊
- 紅樓夢
- 素懷
- 給自己和孤獨的星球
- 綠星光
- 緣定黎夕
- 繁体
- 繁體
- 繪本
- 繪畫
- 罅隙
- 罗伦斯
- 羅倫斯
- 羅貫中
- 翻譯
- 翻譯文學
- 老妈教会我的事
- 老媽教會我的事
- 联合早报
- 聯合早報
- 肉與肉的相遇
- 背包走天涯
- 致美好的灰色
- 致陌生人
- 舞雩詠歸
- 舞雩詠歸 001
- 艾禺
- 苏秉苓
- 英培安
- 英文
- 英文書
- 英語
- 范俊奇
- 草根
- 草根書室
- 草船借箭
- 華文
- 華文創作
- 華文報歷史
- 華文教育
- 華文現代詩
- 華文老師趣味故事
- 萬卷樓
- 萬有醫始
- 蔡欣洵
- 蔡深江
- 薔薇邊緣
- 藝術
- 藝術雜誌
- 蘇秉苓
- 蘇穎欣
- 蘇章愷
- 虎威
- 虚构
- 虛構
- 蛋黄人生
- 蟹蟹你
- 西遊記
- 要有光
- 親愛的青蛙
- 觀感獅城
- 言情小說
- 記號
- 訪談
- 許振義
- 許源泰
- 許維賢
- 許通元
- 評論集
- 詩
- 詩托邦
- 詩精
- 詩集
- 語凡
- 誰才是真正的大書蟲
- 請溫柔以對
- 論文
- 謝裕民
- 访谈
- 诗托邦
- 象形
- 貓
- 貪吃犀鳥愛飯粿
- 買咯冰
- 賀爾
- 赤道風
- 超人媽媽和她的娘惹糕
- 超人爸爸的煩惱
- 趙雲單騎救主
- 趴趴走
- 輕小說
- 辛苦了紅頭巾
- 辛苦了苦力叔叔
- 迷圖
- 退刀記
- 遇見穿牆的女孩
- 遊記
- 邁克
- 那些學生教會我的一二三事
- 那間小小的、小小的甜點店
- 郭书真
- 郭令明
- 郭書真
- 郭詩玲
- 都市求生記
- 都市求生记
- 都市錄
- 鄭和
- 鄭和來了:有趣的文化小故事
- 鄭景祥
- 鄭林林
- 野峰
- 錯視與幻聽
- 鍾秀玲
- 鐘怡雯
- 長坂坡大戰
- 長篇小說
- 長篇歷史小說
- 閃小說
- 防水貼紙
- 阿果
- 阿果繪本拼音版
- 陈干煌
- 陳劍
- 陳幹煌
- 陳文慧
- 陳昌榮
- 陳翠屏
- 雅意
- 雅意:新加坡華文報藏書畫擷珍
- 雙語
- 雜誌
- 雨後有彩虹
- 雨花雲蕊舊月落
- 雲大篪
- 雷思傑
- 霓虹燈下的㗝呸店
- 青春版四大名著
- 非書類
- 非虚构
- 韓麗珠
- 順順利利
- 頑皮動物遊獅城
- 風呂敷(furoshiki)
- 風和日麗天重逢
- 飛虎情緣
- 飞虎情缘
- 飞虎情缘: 何永道回忆录
- 食品
- 食品食譜
- 食譜
- 飯飯之輩
- 飲品
- 飲食文化
- 飲食文學
- 香港
- 馬來文
- 馬來素描
- 馬來西亞
- 駿之
- 马来西亚
- 高譚
- 麵包特工隊
- 黃卓倫
- 黃向京
- 黃意會
- 黃文傑
- 黃旭暉
- 黃明德
- 黄文杰
- 黑色城市
- 點智慧
- 點智慧11
- 點智慧12
- 點智慧·漫畫

不可預期——詩精50首◎孤星子、洪均榮、陳文慧主編
Regular price $19.00 Sale price $18.00《不可預期》是對於過往的敬意,現在的奮鬥,以及未來的期待。半個世紀,五十首精選,時長兩年的整理、梳理,解構又重新建構下,清晰譜出現代詩歌的本土傳統與承繼。欲興文學,詩必先鋒,詩人敏銳的洞悉與感知能力,往往為生活環境印刻下「當下」的見證,不僅讓後者有跡可尋,亦讓不同的「當下」在輪迴中找到知音。五十首充滿前瞻性、趣味性的作品,有意開闢讀者對於新華詩作的新想像,並將閱讀的心帶回到最初的悸動與感動。
——孤星子、洪均榮、陳文慧主編《不可預期——詩精50首》(新加坡:Ethos Books,2018)。

Why Palestine?: Reflections From Singapore◎Walid Jumblatt Abdullah
Regular price $18.00If you’ve ever wondered why people keep talking about Palestine, or the point of keeping up with a long-drawn conflict in the Middle East and what difference you could possibly make, this book is for you. Political analyst and podcaster Walid Jumblatt Abdullah takes on questions that Singaporeans have often raised about Palestine, laying out answers that clarify and inform.
Walid examines myths (“Could Gaza Have Been Singapore?”) and sheds light on the double standards of Western powers, to whom human rights seem to matter, except for where Palestine is concerned. Explaining how the Palestinians have been systematically dehumanised for decades, the book highlights how they continue to exist nevertheless, their very existence an act of resistance.
Why Palestine? is an illuminating starting point for newcomers to the issue, and a passionate primer that seasoned activists will welcome for capturing the heart and hope of a long-disenfranchised people and those who support them.

一首詩的時間:第二輯 In the Space of A Poem - Vol. 2
Regular price $16.00 Sale price $10.00——陳文慧主編《一首詩的時間:第二緝》(新加坡:Ethos Books,2017)。

一首詩的時間 2015 In the Space of A Poem 2015
Regular price $18.00 Sale price $10.002015年6月份,新文潮文學社在臉書上舉辦了 「一首詩的時間」網絡寫詩活動。「一首詩2015」的編委連續30天,每天準時於凌晨貼上一個主題(與加分題),讓詩人按照主題創作一首詩。這本詩集結集收錄了詩人對主題的回應,顯示了新加坡新一代以華文創作的詩人的作品,其不僅自由而恣意,也展現出眾聲喧嘩的特色。
——孤星子主编《一首詩的時間 2015》(新加坡:Ethos Books,2016)。

Neverness◎Fairoz Ahmad
Regular price $27.00There are obscure emotions that reside in every one of us, where language cannot reach, because its waters are too deep. A lot was going on in 1979. Most Malay villages were long gone or in their dying days. Malay rock began its unstoppable rise with the emergence of its first influential rock band, while drugs were just across the street. And on one Friday night that year, during the final months in the life of the once major Malay village of Engku Aman in Geylang Serai, 15-year-old Alia left her house and vanished without a trace. In the aftermath of her disappearance, the protective layers in the lives of three other young people who knew her begin unpeeling as they struggle to make sense of her disappearance and their lives in a period of immense social and cultural change.
A poignant coming-of-age historical novel that captures what it might have felt like to live in Engku Aman, for which there is little formal historical accounting. While there are many historical novels in Sing Lit that centre the Chinese Singaporean experience, Neverness centres the Malay experience and immerses readers in the heyday of Malay rock. Suitable for both young adults and adults.

17A Keong Saik Road◎Charmaine Leung
Regular price $21.00Mummy, why do you always have to leave for 17A…
17A Keong Saik Road recounts Charmaine Leung’s growing-up years on Keong Saik Road in the 1970s when it was a prominent red-light precinct in Chinatown in Singapore. An interweaving of past and present narratives, 17A Keong Saik Road tells of her mother’s journey as a young child put up for sale to becoming the madame of a brothel in Keong Saik. Unfolding her story as the daughter of a brothel operator and witnessing these changes to her family, Charmaine traces the transformation of the Keong Saik area from the 1930s to the present, and through writing, finds reconciliation.
A beautiful dedication to the past, to memory, and to the people who have gone before us, 17A Keong Saik Road tells the rich stories of the Ma Je, the Pei Pa Zai, and the Dai Gu Liong—marginalised, forgotten women of the past, who despite their difficulties, persevered in working towards the hope of a better future.

City Of Rain◎Alvin Pang
Regular price $22.00“One of Singapore’s most visible poets, Pang grows with each book. In his poems we hear a voice unhurried, confident, and capable of carrying diverse humors, and read a rhetoric shaded to ironies, surprising us with glimpses of contemporary experience that affirm yet mock, celebrate and unsettle. His poetry adds a rich and complex presence to the critical mass of urban literature now fully emergent from Singapore. His poems, at once recognizably national and international in reach, offer a fresh edgy energy to this tradition.”
- Professor Shirley Geok-lin Lim, Winner of the Commonwealth Poetry Prize, 1992 and author of Joss and Gold

A Place for Us◎Cassandra Chiu
Regular price $24.00Disability is neither strange nor distant. Part autobiography, part reflections of social advocate Cassandra Chiu’s experiences as a person living with visual impairment, A Place For Us is the story of the first woman to be a guide dog handler in Singapore and the first Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum in Southeast Asia who happens to be blind.
Cassandra’s story starts with her growing-up years in 1980s Singapore, chronicling how her life unfolds with the onset of Stargardt disease, which causes progressive vision loss. From pursuing an education, navigating motherhood, to building a career as a psychotherapist, Cassandra openly discusses the attitudes towards disability and her journey towards true independence with her guide dog Esme.
In inimitable frankness, A Place For Us offers an illuminating perspective of a person living with disability beyond the pity party of her life, and advocates for a more equal and sustainable future for people with disabilities.

We Are Not The Enemy: The Practice of Advocacy in Singapore◎Constance Singam, Margaret Thomas (Editors)
Regular price $36.00Advocates and activists in Singapore contribute to policy discussions and positive change through a combination of deft manoeuvres and patient politics. Yet civil society is often unacknowledged, their skill and labour instead frequently misunderstood, even earning them the label of “troublemakers” or “enemies of the state.”
This collection of essays and interviews is a candid reflection on the intentions, beliefs and strategies behind the practice of advocacy across a spectrum of causes. The contributors come from varying backgrounds and include academics, artists, lawyers, journalists, non-profit and advocacy organisations, student and community organisers. They share practical insights into their aims and community-building work, and the tactics they employ to overcome obstacles, shedding light on how to navigate a city-state with shifting socio-political fault lines and out-of-bound markers.
With an introduction, “It is Time to Trim the Banyan Tree”, by Constance Singam, and a conclusion, “Their Struggle is Ours to Continue”, by Suraendher Kumarr.
Ethos Books has also partnered with the Community for Advocacy and Political Education (CAPE) to produce The CAPE Handbook to Advocacy in Singapore. Authored by CAPE and produced by Ethos Books, this concise guide dispels misconceptions and offers practical action steps, easing readers into strategies for effective advocacy and activism in the city-state.
Contributors: Alex Au, Alfian Sa’at, The Community for Advocacy and Political Education (CAPE), Cherian George, Corinna Lim, Disabled People’s Association, Irie Aman, Kenneth Paul Tan, Kirsten Han, Ng Kok Hoe, Pink Dot, Reetaza Chatterjee, Remy Choo, SG Climate Rally, Suraendher Kumarr, Thirunalan Sasitharan, Walid Jumblatt Bin Abdullah

Not Without Us: Perspectives on Disability and Inclusion in Singapore◎Kuansong Victor Zhuang, Meng Ee Wong, Dan Goodley (Editors)
Regular price $30.00Disability is all around us—among people we meet, the media, sports, our own family and friends. Undeniably, all of us have or will one day come to experience or encounter disability. But how can we reckon with the realities of those who live with disability, or its reality in our own lives? In a city-state slowly moving towards inclusion, how do those meant to be 'included' feel about such efforts? Not Without Us: perspectives on disability and inclusion in Singapore is a groundbreaking collection of essays that takes a creative and critical disability studies approach to centre disability, and rethink the ways in which we research, analyse, think and know about disability in our lives. Across multiple domains and perspectives, the writings in this volume consider what it means to live with disability in a purportedly inclusive and accessible Singapore.
(Book cover description: The central visual of the cover is a photo. This photo, taken by photographer Isabelle Lim, is of two performers in the centre of a spacious room, where the wall and floor are both decorated with brown and gold patterns. The foreground is lit by a bright yet warm light, which illuminates the side profiles of the two men against the blackness behind them. Closer to the camera is the rapper Wheelsmith. Clad in a mustard yellow cap and blue denim jacket, he is riding his wheelchair toward the left of the picture. At a slight distance behind him, and in the midst of walking in the opposite direction, is fellow rapper ShiGGa Shay, sporting an orange, white, and blue puffer jacket and a bun of electric blue hair."
On the book cover, this photo is accompanied by the Book title "Not Without Us" in all-capitals, beige text against the black background on the top of the photo. The subtitle in small caps "perspectives on disability and inclusion in Singapore" is printed in the center-right of the book cover. In the black background of the photo are light blue lines in the shape of Wheelsmith's and Shigga Shay's silhouettes, layered and expanding towards the top of the book cover to amplify their poses in the photo. The editors' byline is at the bottom of the book cover in black text.)
“This is a pathbreaking book. Not Without Us weaves together a rich fabric of voices exploring the politics and poetics of disability in Singapore. Moving between lived reality, representation and struggles for social transformation, the collection excavates hidden or forgotten pasts, documents struggles and community formation in the present, and hints at possible futures. The essay collection challenges contemporary discourses of and scholarship on disability in Singapore by centring disabled subjectivities. In the process, it opens up new spaces of empathy, praxis and critique.” —Philip Holden, Independent Scholar and Counsellor
"It warms my heart to see another book on disability through the Asian lens. Not just any book or author, but a plethora of contributors who are leaders in the Singaporean disability scene. The tapestry of all the essays inspires the imagination to how we can truly create a place that all of us can call home. Inclusion isn’t just keeping the token seat available, or inviting someone disabled to the party, but truly paving the way forward for all of us to celebrate each other as individuals in all our different shapes, sizes and colours. Thank you Not Without Us for so eloquently celebrating ‘Nothing about us, without us’!" —Cassandra Chiu, Psychotherapist; Social Advocate and Author of A Place For Us
"Not Without Us is a richly edited and profoundly written collection of essays about disability in Singapore. It is part of a new and fresh movement to provide local knowledges and global perspectives to a field that has been for too long grounded in the West, particularly the US and the UK. The book will be extremely valuable not only to readers in Singapore but also to those throughout the world who seek a broader perspective on significant issues in disability studies, arts, policy and activism." —Lennard J. Davis, Distinguished Professor, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Illinois in Chicago

Sister Snake◎Amanda Lee Koe
Regular price $24.00A glittering, bold, darkly funny novel about two sisters—one in New York, one in Singapore—who are bound by an ancient secret.
Sisterhood is difficult for Su and Emerald. Su leads a sheltered, moneyed life as the picture-perfect wife of a conservative politician in Singapore. Emerald is a nihilistic sugar baby in New York, living from whim to whim and using her charms to make ends meet. But they share a secret: once, they were snakes, basking under a full moon in Tang dynasty China.
A thousand years later, their mysterious history is the only thing still binding them together. When Emerald experiences a violent encounter in Central Park and Su boards the next flight to New York, the two reach a tenuous reconciliation for the first time in decades. Su convinces Emerald to move to Singapore so she can keep an eye on her—but she soon begins to worry that Emerald’s irrepressible behaviour will out them both, in a sparkling, affluent city where everything runs like clockwork and any deviation from the norm is automatically suspect.
Razor-sharp, hilarious, and raw in emotion, Sister Snake, a reimagining of The Legend of the White Snake, is a novel about being seen for who you are—and, ultimately, how to live free.
“Amanda Lee Koe’s tale of serpentine sisterhood will wend its way into your heart. Drawing equally from folklore and current events, this fearless novel entertains and delights. Beneath its beguiling surface, Sister Snake explores fundamental questions: Are our destinies determined by our bodies? What forms can family take? And what, in the end, does it mean to be human?”
—Rajesh Parameswaran, author of I Am An Executioner

Loss Adjustment◎Linda Collins
Regular price $23.00“I have had nothing bad happen to me except my own doing. I have let this cowardice envelop me, and I can’t shake it off. I will commit the worst thing you can ever do to someone who loves you: killing yourself. The scary thing is, I’m okay with that.” —Victoria McLeod, Singapore, March 30, 2014
Loss Adjustment is a mother’s recount of her 17-year-old daughter’s suicide.
In the wake of Victoria McLeod’s passing, she left behind a remarkable journal in her laptop of the final four months of her life. Linda Collins, her mother, has woven these into her memoir, which is at once cohesive, yet fragmented, reflecting a survivor's state of mind after devastating loss.
Loss Adjustment involves the endless whys, the journey of Linda Collins and her husband in honouring Victoria, and the impossible question of what drove their daughter to this irretrievable act. A stunningly intimate portrait of loss and grief, Loss Adjustment is a breaking of silence—a book whose face society cannot turn away from.

Patient History◎Tricia Tan
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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)
Regular price $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
Regular price $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
Regular price $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.

Goodbye My Kampong! Potong Pasir, 1966 to 1975◎Josephine Chia
Regular price $22.00Sequel to Josephine Chia’s 2014 Singapore Literature prize-winning book, Kampong Spirit - Gotong Royong: Life in Potong Pasir, 1955 to 1965.
Kampong life in Singapore did not end in 1965 with her independence.
In Josephine Chia’s new collection of non-fiction stories, the phasing out of attap-thatched villages, the largest mass movement in Singapore, is set against the backdrop of significant national events.
Weaving personal tribulations—her teenage angst—and the experiences of villagers from her kampong, Josephine skilfully parallels the hopes and challenges of a toddling nation going through the throes of industrialisation and rapid changes from 1966 to 1975.
These delightful, real-life stories, sprinkled with snippets of her Peranakan culture, reveal the joie-de-vivre of gotong royong or community spirit, despite impoverished conditions, in the last days of kampong life.

Raffles Renounced: Towards a Merdeka History◎Alfian Sa’at, Faris Joraimi, Sai Siew Min (Editors)
Regular price $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)
Regular price $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)
Regular price $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.