Shortlisted for NUS Singapore History Prize 2021
Winner of Singapore Literature Prize 2018, Fiction
Shortlisted for Singapore Book Awards 2018, Best Fiction Title
Finalist for the Epigram Books Fiction Prize 2016
Siew Li leaves her husband and children in Tiong Bahru to
fight for freedom in the jungles of Malaya. Decades later, a Malaysian
journalist returns to her homeland to uncover the truth of a massacre committed
during the Emergency. And in Singapore, Siew Li's niece Stella finds herself
accused of being a Marxist conspirator.
Jeremy Tiang's debut novel dives into the tumultuous days of
leftist movements and political detentions in Singapore and Malaysia. It
follows an extended family from the 1940s to the present day as they navigate
the choppy political currents of the region. What happens when the things that
divide us also bind us together?
About the Author
Jeremy Tiang’s writing has appeared in The
Guardian, Esquire (Singapore), Brooklyn Rail, Drunken
Boat, Meanjin, Ambit, Quarterly Literary
Review Singapore and the first two volumes of The Epigram Book
of Best New Singaporean Short Stories.
He won the Golden Point Award in 2009 and has been
shortlisted for the Iowa Review Award and American Short Fiction Prize. He
has also translated more than ten books from the Chinese, including work by You
Jin, Wong Yoon Wah, Yeng Pway Ngon, Yan Geling and Zhang Yueran, and has
been awarded translation grants from PEN American Center, the National
Endowment for the Arts (US) and the National Museum of Taiwanese Literature.
Jeremy’s plays include The Last Days of Limehouse (Yellow
Earth, London), Floating Bones (The Arts House; translations
of Han Lao Da and Quah Sy Ren one-acts) and A Dream of Red
Pavilions (Pan Asian Rep, NYC; adapted from the novel by Cao Xueqin).