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Bukit Brown Cemetery, Singapore 2014

Bukit Brown Cemetery, Singapore 2014

Walking Backwards Up Bukit Timah Hill

July 21, 2015 in WRUS, Writing, Singapore

"On that particular Sunday, Henry had decided they should walk backwards up the hill at Bukit Timah nature reserve. He wanted to walk up Bukit Timah hill for health reasons on the advice of his doctor, and because he liked to imagine being there in February 1942 as one of the last tigers on the island, taking refuge in the undergrowth while Japanese soldiers surged through the jungle sweeping towards victory over the colonial power. Henry’s doctor advised him to walk up the hill backwards because this would result in less strain on the knees."

"Margaret didn’t want to go up Bukit Timah hill either forwards or backwards. She wanted to visit Bukit Brown cemetery instead, because large parts of it weren’t going to be there very much longer and it looked the way she felt: old, green and tangled- up inside. As always, Henry had his way and Margaret would have to explore Bukit Brown another day."

Excerpt from Walking Backwards Up Bukit Timah Hill, a story in We Rose Up Slowly

Buy We Rose Up Slowly online here (free shipping in Singapore)

Tags: WRUS, We Rose Up Slowly, Walking backwards Up Bukit Timah Hill, Bukit Brown Cemetery
Dog, Aldinga Beach, South Australia, 2010

Dog, Aldinga Beach, South Australia, 2010

Idiot & Dog

July 20, 2015 in Writing, WRUS, Australia

'“Here dog, it’s hot in here, isn’t it? Sorry, but my aircon needs a bit of gas.”

Shane wound down the ute’s side window and the dog rose and leant away from him. With its paws on the armrest, the dog poked its tongue out and sniffed. Shane laughed because he knew this joy. He’d done it himself: stuck his head out and felt the wind and sun on his face, a caress of light and air.

Shane and Diane met on an interstate bus travelling from Adelaide to Sydney. Diane was nestled against the window and Shane took the aisle seat next to her. He noticed everything about her. She wore a brown terry towelling tracksuit and white T-shirt, ate oven- baked potato chips, and sipped from a bottle of mineral water. She was listening to music and playing Candy Crush on her phone.'

Excerpt from Idiot & Dog, a story in We Rose Up Slowly

Buy We Rose Up Slowly online here (free shipping in Singapore).

Tags: WRUS, Writing, We Rose Up Slowly, SGLit, SGlitftw
Shibuya, Tokyo, Oct 2012

Shibuya, Tokyo, Oct 2012

Death of a Clown

July 19, 2015 in WRUS, Writing, Japan

"Some time ago, his followers, his clowns, returned to haunt me. They lurked in the darker corners of building sites masquerading as foreign construction workers. As I passed looming edifices of unfinished concrete and steel, I heard them giggling. I had this sense I was being watched. I was almost certain someone followed me armed with a custard cream pie. One day, in the middle of a crowded underpass on the way to the MRT station at Raffles Place, I stopped and turned around abruptly. Amidst the flurry of movement I was sure I caught a glimpse of orange curly hair and a red blur on someone’s face. Those clowns were at it again. In the crowded MRT carriage, as the train stopped at Dhoby Ghaut, just as the doors opened and people flooded out, someone grabbed at my head and tore a clump of hair out. I did not, could not, see who had viciously attacked me. There were too many bobbing heads, and I was overcome by so many unknown faces. There were too many people, too close together, and everyone was a stranger."

Excerpt from Death of a Clown, a story in We Rose Up Slowly

Buy We Rose Up Slowly online here (free shipping in Singapore).

Death of a Clown is a story from my collection, We Rose Up Slowly. The story was written in 2012 and substantially revised in 2014. The earlier form of the story was published in QLRS, April 2012. 

In Death of a Clown:

  • a son finally meets his father in a Johor Bahru nursing home after many years apart 
  • confronted with the past and memories he's unsure are real, he attempts to move beyond the patriarch
  • stories help him avoid the pain of the past
Tags: WRUS, Writing, Tokyo, Japan, Clown, Death of a Clown
Karaoke Lounge, Craig Road, Singapore, 2012

Karaoke Lounge, Craig Road, Singapore, 2012

A Long Bicycle Ride into the Sea

July 16, 2015 in WRUS, Writing, Singapore

"I entered a large room with plush red carpet on the walls, dark vinyl booths, and a raised podium in the far corner where some girl was singing “无条件为你”1  robustly and off-key. The lounge was loud, musty and hazy. It was busy with lots of blokes. Smoke lingered from cigarettes and Filipino cigars. It was hard to see as the only light came from lasers flashing coloured lines across the room and the glow of TV screens showing balls bouncing across the tops of lyrics as couples walked through tulip gardens. I wondered about trying to find a drink."

1 “Unconditionally for You”

Excerpt from A Long Bicycle Ride Into the Sea, a story in We Rose Up Slowly

You can buy We Rose Up Slowly online here (free shipping in Singapore)

A Long Bicycle Ride into the Sea is a story from my collection, We Rose Up Slowly. The story was written in 2011 and published in Coast (Math Paper Press, 2011). 

A Long Bicycle Ride into the Sea:

  • is about a young lawyer, coasting along in privilege, who is challenged to get wet to prove his love 
  • examines unconscious assumptions, and how a sense of entitlement and the shallowness of one's gaze obscures self awareness, intimacy and growth
  • shows the effect of this on relations with others
  • contains passing references to small law firms in shophouses in Tanjong Pagar, Prada suits, Raoul cuff links, Lloyds shoes, Louboutin heels, silver charm bracelets, Benny Hill flirting with Emily Dickinson, Halal eating houses, a HDB flat in Clementi, a Hokkien Sponge Bob Square Pants, Lau Pa Sat, Billy Wilder films, Wayne Rooney and Fernando Torres, Amitabh Bachchan and Maggie Q, Kong Hee and Lawrence Khong, Ai Weiwei, Miroslav Tichý, Henry Darger and Beatrix Potter, Justin Bieber and Taufik Batisah, the planet Zog, and the song 无条件为你.
  • Why so many names dropped? I wanted to show the pretentious superficiality of the narrator and how this obstructs his ability to achieve deeper relations with others.
Tags: WRUS, Karaoke, Singapore, LEica
 Audrey Chin, Nine Cuts

Audrey Chin, Nine Cuts

 Verena Tay & Kenny Leck, Balik Kampung

Verena Tay & Kenny Leck, Balik Kampung

 Ann Ang & yours truly

Ann Ang & yours truly

 Dora Tan, Balik Kampung

Dora Tan, Balik Kampung

 Rosemarie Somaiah, Balik Kampung

Rosemarie Somaiah, Balik Kampung

 Cyril Wong, The Lover's Inventory

Cyril Wong, The Lover's Inventory

 Jon Gresham, We Rose Up Slowly

Jon Gresham, We Rose Up Slowly

  Jon Gresham, We Rose Up Slowly

Jon Gresham, We Rose Up Slowly

 The crowd

The crowd

 Cyril Wong, The Lover's Inventory

Cyril Wong, The Lover's Inventory

 Stephanie Ye, From the Belly of the Cat

Stephanie Ye, From the Belly of the Cat

 Cat

Cat

 J Y Yang, From the Belly of the Cat

J Y Yang, From the Belly of the Cat

 J Y Yang & a cat, From the Belly of the Cat

J Y Yang & a cat, From the Belly of the Cat

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 Kenny Leck introducing The Sixes with Joshua Ip, David Wong & Hao Guang

Kenny Leck introducing The Sixes with Joshua Ip, David Wong & Hao Guang

 David Wong

David Wong

 Hao Guang

Hao Guang

 Amanda Chong

Amanda Chong

 Samuel Lee

Samuel Lee

 Jennifer Champion

Jennifer Champion

 Audrey Chin, Nine Cuts  Verena Tay & Kenny Leck, Balik Kampung  Ann Ang & yours truly  Dora Tan, Balik Kampung  Rosemarie Somaiah, Balik Kampung  Cyril Wong, The Lover's Inventory  Jon Gresham, We Rose Up Slowly   Jon Gresham, We Rose Up Slowly   The crowd  Cyril Wong, The Lover's Inventory  Stephanie Ye, From the Belly of the Cat  Cat  J Y Yang, From the Belly of the Cat  J Y Yang & a cat, From the Belly of the Cat BooksActually July 2015-16.jpg  Kenny Leck introducing The Sixes with Joshua Ip, David Wong & Hao Guang  David Wong  Hao Guang  Amanda Chong  Samuel Lee  Jennifer Champion

We Rose Up Slowly launched at 24 Hours at BooksActually

July 13, 2015 in Writing, WRUS, Singapore

On 10 July 2015, We Rose Up Slowly was launched at BooksActually’s 24 Hour event.

Cyril Wong took over photography duties for a while, and I read the first few pages of the title story, the tissue packet scene from Idiot and Dog, and the start of A Fleeting Tenderness at the End of Night.

I took my glasses off so I didn’t get too nervous at people watching me read but didn’t notice my editor, Stephanie Ye, only three feet away.

Anyway, here are some images from the evening with Audrey Chin launching Nine Cuts, Dora Tan and Rosemarie Somaiah reading their stories from Balik Kampung, edited by Verena Tay, Cyril Wong launching The Lover’s Inventory, Stephanie Ye launching the Second Edition of From the Belly of the Cat with J Y Yang and Joshua Ip reading, and The Sixes, a poetry collective, including Joshua Ip, David Wong, Hao Guang, Amanda Chong, Samuel Lee & Jennifer Champion.

BooksActually launched their loyalty program with a membership card that gets you a 10% discount on all purchases.

 

Tags: Writing, We Rose Up Slowly, WRUS, Singapore, BooksActually, book launch
 Snoozing at BooksActually

Snoozing at BooksActually

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We Take the Baby to BooksActually

July 10, 2015 in Family & Friends, Singapore, WRUS, Writing

Yesterday, We Rose Up Slowly arrived at Books Actually together with another nine titles from Math Paper Press. We took Sophia to see the team unpack 10,000 books (she snoozed the whole time), bumped into Cyril Wong and distracted Renee, Kenny & Ange long enough to get a group photo.

Today is BooksActually’s 24 hour Bookstore Event. Head on down to the bookstore at 9 Yong Siak Street, Tiong Bahru to hear:

  • 7PM: Nine Cuts by Audrey Chin, Launch & Reading
  • 8PM: Balik Kampung edited by Verena Tay, Reading, featuring Dora Tan, Rosemarie Somaiah, Secretmanta Ray, and Verena Tay
  • 9PM: We Rose Up Slowly by Jon Gresham, Launch & Reading
  • 10PM: The Lover's Inventory by Cyril Wong, Launch & Reading
  • 11PM: From the Belly of the Cat edited by Stephanie Ye, Reading, featuring Jon Gresham, JY Yang, Joshua Ip, and Stephanie Ye
  • 12AM: Introducing THE SIXES under the mentorship of the Manuscript Bootcamp. Works are in progress but the poets are reading works that will be published later this year & next. Featuring Jennifer Ann Champion, Amanda Chong, Samuel Lee, David Wong, Daryl Lim (absent), and Hao Guang (absent).
  • 1AM: Poems After Midnight with Pooja Nansi

There will be cider and satay, and hijinks with cats.

Tags: BooksActually, We Rose Up Slowly, Cyril Wong, Kenny Leck, Renee Ting, Ange Chua, Writers, WRUS, Singapore
Marshalling yards, Tanjong Pagar, Singapore 

Marshalling yards, Tanjong Pagar, Singapore 

A Fleeting Tenderness at the End of Night

July 08, 2015 in Writing, Singapore

"Ling is not sure how the night will end. She hopes to be with Lakshmi, talking and eating, and then afterwards, before the sun rises, wandering along the path overlooking the deserted Malayan Railway marshalling yards near the Tanjong Pagar Railway Station. They will smoke cigarettes and gaze across the barren neglected space made vacant for the purpose of future development. She will tell Lakshmi she was on first-name terms with the snakes and the monkeys, the vermin and the feral beasts, who used to live in the depleted jungle, amongst the scant remains of undergrowth and decaying concrete structures."

From A Fleeting Tenderness at the End of Night, a story in We Rose Up Slowly

You can buy We Rose Up Slowly online here (free shipping in Singapore).

I wrote this story during the latter half of 2014.

I started by ‘splurging’ all I felt, and knew, about the factual event at the foundation of this story - this event is well known to people living in Singapore in mid 2012. I wrote in a fast, haphazard, chaotic manner. I focussed on emotion and the action. I did not concern myself with grammar, spelling or proper sentence construction. I just wrote.

I developed the story by writing a detailed imagined backstory for fictional participants. I explored their motivation, their history and the conflicts between characters. I tried to articulate my understanding of their dreams, how these drove their actions, and how these actions changed them.

I wrote several different versions. An initial draft was written in first person POV - in a pale imitation of Rashomon. Then I decided on a third person POV. I changed the protagonist and wrote several alternate endings.

I submitted the story to a few literary magazines in early 2015 without success. 

In A Fleeting Tenderness at the End of Night:

  • There is tension between the romantic dreamer and practical realists limited by their desire for wealth and social acceptance through conformity.
  • The heroine/protagonist yearns to find an unconditional, passionate, deep, instinctual love. She refuses to accept practical realities and longs for something more.
  • The tension between non Singaporeans and Singaporeans is also touched on, including PRC mainlanders who work in Singapore, and their awareness of how they are perceived by ‘the locals’. 
  • The collision of different world views is played out with tragic consequences. The ‘final event’ represents a form of judgment, the intrusion of chaos and coincidence. 
  • Ultimately, the romantic soul is the only one who survives: The dreamer survives reality.
  • I chose the name Jia Bayou for the Lamborghini driver initially. Stephanie Ye, my brilliant editor, pointed out this was like calling a character Hamlet - a burden to heavy for any character to bear. So we tossed around Yang Liu or Liu Wenhui, and ultimately ended up with Lang Zheng based on a chinese footballer who plays for Beijing Guoan FC.
  • There are passing references to Zouk, a jelly girl, Hyperdub, roti prata, a black Lamborghini Aventador, the National Museum, baozi, Boey Kim Cheng's ‘lost in the swaying sense of things’, Bai mu, a Jimmy Choo shoe, rambutan, voles, SGH, murtabak, Kent Ridge park, Tanjong Pagar Railway Station marshalling yards, the Police Cantonment Complex.
  • The story is dedicated to all those who have tragically lost there life on Singapore’s roads.
Tags: WRUS, We Rose Up Slowly, Writing, SGLit

Boys & Pigeon, Bangkok, & The Boys of Summer

July 05, 2015 in Favourites, Thailand

In Singapore, Australia and Jakarta, worlds fall apart, everyone is looking for an escape, and nothing will be the same again. Exploring possibility and desire, yearning and identity, We Rose Up Slowly is the debut collection of short stories by Jon Gresham. Buy We Rose Up Slowly on line here.

Enough of that blatant self promotion. Here is a poem:

I see the boys of summer

I

I see the boys of summer in their ruin
Lay the gold tithings barren,
Setting no store by harvest, freeze the soils;
There in their heat the winter floods
Of frozen loves they fetch their girls,
And drown the cargoed apples in their tides.

These boys of light are curdlers in their folly,
Sour the boiling honey;
The jacks of frost they finger in the hives;
There in the sun the frigid threads
Of doubt and dark they feed their nerves;
The signal moon is zero in their voids.

I see the summer children in their mothers
Split up the brawned womb’s weathers,
Divide the night and day with fairy thumbs;
There in the deep with quartered shades
Of sun and moon they paint their dams
As sunlight paints the shelling of their heads.

I see that from these boys shall men of nothing
Stature by seedy shifting,
Or lame the air with leaping from its heats;
There from their hearts the dogdayed pulse
Of love and light bursts in their throats.
O see the pulse of summer in the ice.

II

But seasons must be challenged or they totter
Into a chiming quarter
Where, punctual as death, we ring the stars;
There, in his night, the black-tongued bells
The sleepy man of winter pulls,
Nor blows back moon-and-midnight as she blows.

We are the dark derniers let us summon
Death from a summer woman,
A muscling life from lovers in their cramp
From the fair dead who flush the sea
The bright-eyed worm on Davy’s lamp
And from the planted womb the man of straw.
We summer boys in this four-winded spinning,
Green of the seaweeds’ iron,
Hold up the noisy sea and drop her birds,
Pick the world’s ball of wave and froth
To choke the deserts with her tides,
And comb the county gardens for a wreath.

In spring we cross our foreheads with the holly,
Heigh ho the blood and berry,
And nail the merry squires to the trees;
Here love’s damp muscle dries and dies
Here break a kiss in no love’s quarry,
O see the poles of promise in the boys.

III

I see you boys of summer in your ruin.
Man in his maggot’s barren.
And boys are full and foreign to the pouch.
I am the man your father was.
We are the sons of flint and pitch.
O see the poles are kissing as they cross.

Dylan Thomas, 1914 - 1953

Tags: Boys, Bangkok, Thailand, Pigeon, poetry, Dylan Thomas
 Getting ready

Getting ready

 Backstage

Backstage

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 Dancing competition

Dancing competition

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 Volunteers backstage

Volunteers backstage

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 Getting ready  Backstage HomeShowtime-3.jpg HomeShowtime-4.jpg HomeShowtime-5.jpg HomeShowtime-6.jpg HomeShowtime-7.jpg HomeShowtime-8.jpg HomeShowtime-9.jpg  Dancing competition HomeShowtime-11.jpg HomeShowtime-12.jpg HomeShowtime-13.jpg HomeShowtime-14.jpg HomeShowtime-15.jpg HomeShowtime-16.jpg HomeShowtime-17.jpg HomeShowtime-18.jpg HomeShowtime-19.jpg HomeShowtime-20.jpg HomeShowtime-21.jpg HomeShowtime-22.jpg HomeShowtime-23.jpg HomeShowtime-24.jpg  Volunteers backstage HomeShowtime-26.jpg HomeShowtime-27.jpg HomeShowtime-28.jpg HomeShowtime-29.jpg HomeShowtime-30.jpg HomeShowtime-31.jpg HomeShowtime-32.jpg HomeShowtime-33.jpg HomeShowtime-34.jpg HomeShowtime-35.jpg HomeShowtime-36.jpg HomeShowtime-37.jpg HomeShowtime-38.jpg HomeShowtime-39.jpg HomeShowtime-40.jpg HomeShowtime-41.jpg

Home Showtime Pageant

July 02, 2015 in Singapore

And you thought you knew what domestic workers were capable of, who they were and the limits of their achievement? 

HOME Showtime Pageant was held at NTUC Auditorium, One Marina Boulevard on 27 June 2015. The 'extravaganza' was organised by and for domestic workers. Domestic workers in Singapore let their hair down, put on their frocks, danced, sang and had a good time. Well done to the organisers for a spectacular event.

Images from rehearsals can be found here.

 Evening gowns

Evening gowns

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 Dancing competition

Dancing competition

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 HOME on stage

HOME on stage

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 M.I.S.G win the dancing competition

M.I.S.G win the dancing competition

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 Miss HOME 2015

Miss HOME 2015

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Tags: HOME, Showtime Pageant, Singapore, Domestic Workers, Foreign Workers
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We Rose Up Slowly, Launch on 10 July at BooksActually

July 01, 2015 in Singapore, Writing, WRUS

The debut collection of short stories, We Rose Up Slowly, by Singaporean English Australian, Jon Gresham, will be launched at 9pm on 10 July 2015 at BooksActually at 9 Yong Siak St, Tiong Bahru.

The launch is part of BooksActually's annual 24 Hour Bookstore Event. NB you don't have to hang around for all 24 hours!

Please come along. You can RSVP here.

You can buy We Rose Up Slowly on line here (free delivery in Singapore!).

Tags: We Rose Up Slowly, Singapore, SGLit, book launch, Writing, Writers, literature
Warwick wearing a tie, Bangkok, 2000

Warwick wearing a tie, Bangkok, 2000

Warwick Kneale, Rest In Peace

June 29, 2015 in Family & Friends
Warwick Kneale second from right at Khun Aoi & The Colonel's Wedding, Bangkok

Warwick Kneale second from right at Khun Aoi & The Colonel's Wedding, Bangkok

Goodbye Warwick, you were a rock in challenging times.

Your calm assuredness, warmth, kindness, wisdom and down to earth and easygoing nature made you not just great to work with but a really good friend. You were justifiably proud of all you'd achieved in Thailand.

Thanks also for the ciggies and your jogging and dapper demeanour. I'll never forget your face when covered in mud I traipsed past you and Barry Murphy gobsmacked on the 12th green at Vintage, following my errant drive and a leap falling short into a drainage ditch. I never recovered that bright new Titleist ball.

We will miss you. Farewell old friend. 

Tags: Friend, Warwick Kneale
Bloke, Temple Street, Chinatown, Singapore, 2008

Bloke, Temple Street, Chinatown, Singapore, 2008

Bloke, Temple Street

June 27, 2015 in Favourites, Singapore

Today, I am off to BooksActually to learn how the bookshop works. I will have my best 'retail assistant' face on.

The above image was a Kuala Lumpur International Photo Award Finalist in 2009.

Tags: Singapore, Chinatown, Bloke
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