- 17A Keong Saik Road
- 1966 to 1975
- 2015
- 50首
- 9789811405952
- 9789819415601
- A Life Journey
- A Place for Us
- After the Inquiry
- Alfian Sa’at
- Alvin Pang
- Amanda Lee Koe
- Angelia Poon
- Brown is Redacted
- Brown is Redacted: Reflecting on Race in Singapore
- Cassandra Chiu
- Cassandra Yeap
- Charmaine Leung
- City Of Rain
- Clara Chow
- Constance Singam
- Corridor
- Corridor: 12 Short Stories
- Dan Goodley
- Dan Goodley (Editors)
- Danielle Lim
- Daren Shiau
- Delicious Hunger
- Dey
- Dey◎Shivram Gopinath
- Diana Rahim
- Dream Storeys
- Eating Chilli Crab in the Anthropocene
- Eating Chilli Crab in the Anthropocene◎Matthew Schneider-Mayerson
- Elizabeth Tan
- Esther Vincent Xueming
- Fairoz Ahmad
- Faris Joraimi
- G*d Is A Woman
- Goodbye My Kampong
- Goodbye My Kampong! Potong Pasir
- Hai Fan
- Heartland
- In This Desert
- Jeremy Tiang
- Jinny Koh
- Joel Tan
- Jolene Tan
- Jon Gresham
- Josephine Chia
- Kirsten Han
- Kristian-Marc James Paul
- Kuansong Victor Zhuang
- Life in Singapore Families
- Linda Collins
- Making Kin
- Making Kin: Ecofeminist Essays from Singapore
- Malay Sketches
- Margaret Thomas
- Marko Vignjević
- Matthew Schneider-Mayerson
- Meng Ee Wong
- Ministry of Moral Panic
- Myle Yan Tay
- Mysara Aljaru
- Nazry Bahrawi
- Neverness
- Nine Yard Sarees
- Nine Yard Sarees: a short story cycle
- Not Without Us
- Not Without Us: Perspectives on Disability and Inclusion in Singapore
- Not Without Us: Perspectives on Disability and Inclusion in Singapore◎Kuansong Victor Zhuang
- Patient History
- Poetry
- Prasanthi Ram
- Raffles Renounced
- Raffles Renounced: Towards a Merdeka History
- Sai Siew Min
- Second Edition
- Shezlez the Self-Proclaimed
- Shivram Gopinath
- Short stories
- Singa-Pura-Pura
- Singa-Pura-Pura: Malay Speculative Fiction from Singapore
- Singapore
- Sister Snake
- Tamil
- Tartuffe: The Imposter
- Teo You Yenn
- The Gods Will Hear Us Eventually
- The Singapore I Recognise: Essays on home
- The Sound of SCH
- The Sound of SCH: A Mental Breakdown
- There Were Seeds
- These Foolish Things & Other Stories
- This Is What Inequality Looks Like
- Tricia Tan
- Unease
- Unease: Life in Singapore Families◎Teo You Yenn
- Walid Jumblatt Abdullah
- We Are Not The Enemy
- We Are Not The Enemy: The Practice of Advocacy in Singapore
- We Saw Mountains
- Why Palestine
- Why Palestine?: Reflections From Singapore
- Yeo Wei Wei
- catskull
- climate change
- community and hope
- contemporary Singapore
- creative non-fiction
- essay
- ethos
- ethos books
- family
- fiction
- history
- homesick
- loss adjustment
- memoir
- non-fiction
- nor
- novel
- playwright
- short stories
- social
- sociology
- sustainability
- translated fiction
- 一首詩的時間
- 不可預期
- 五十首
- 人文社科
- 其他
- 劇場
- 孤星子
- 小說
- 小說集
- 散文
- 新加坡
- 新文潮
- 新文潮文學社
- 時代精神
- 時代精神書屋
- 書
- 本地
- 歷史
- 洪均榮
- 现代诗
- 現代詩
- 現代詩歌
- 環保
- 第二緝
- 簡體
- 翻譯小說
- 自傳
- 英文
- 英語
- 華文
- 詩
- 詩歌
- 詩精
- 詩集
- 诗
- 長篇小說
- 陳文慧
- 非虛構

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

Eating Chilli Crab in the Anthropocene◎Matthew Schneider-Mayerson
Regular price $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.

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.

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.

The Singapore I Recognise: Essays on home, community and hope◎Kirsten Han
Regular price $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
Regular price $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.

This Is What Inequality Looks Like◎Teo You Yenn
Regular price $29.00This New Edition of This Is What Inequality Looks Like by Teo You Yenn features a new Afterword by the author, and a Foreword by Kwok Kian Woon, Professor of Sociology at the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
What is poverty? What is inequality? How are they connected? How are they reproduced? How might they be overcome? Why should we try?
The way we frame our questions shapes the way we see solutions. This book does what appears to be a no-brainer task, but one that is missing and important: it asks readers to pose questions in different ways, to shift the vantage point from which they view ‘common sense,’ and in so doing, to see themselves as part of problems and potential solutions. This is a book about how seeing poverty entails confronting inequality. It is about how acknowledging poverty and inequality leads to uncomfortable revelations about our society and ourselves. And it is about how once we see, we cannot, must not, unsee.

Unease: Life in Singapore Families◎Teo You Yenn
Regular price $33.00In Singapore, a loudly ‘pro-family’ society, why is work-life balance so elusive? And why are parents so uneasy? What accounts for this gap between the lived reality and ideal narrative of Singapore families?
Sociologist and bestselling author Teo You Yenn turns her eyes to the contours and rhythms of life inside families, exploring how ‘kiasu’ parents are made and investigating the ways in which inequality marks life in contemporary Singapore. Drawing from in-depth interviews with parents from all walks of life, Unease examines how social structures, individual strategies and common practices come to produce Singaporean ‘cultures’ of doing family.
An incisive exposé of how the logics of hierarchy, competition and unequal worth infect ordinary people’s lives, Unease asks what these cost parents, children and the values we hold as a society. And what possibilities are there for living differently?

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

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.