
Ten Things My Father Never Taught Me and Other Stories
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
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Recommended by the National Library Board Singapore and Ministry of Communications and Information
Look inside the book
Get the E-bookĀ Ā Listen to the audiobookA woman learns of a friendās illness and wonders if she ever truly knew him. A boy who sees ghosts heeds the advice ofĀ a fortune-teller, with surprising consequences. A girl wakes up and realises everybody in her Bedok neighbourhood hasĀ vanished.Ā From Cyril Wong,Ā award-winning author of The Last Lesson of Mrs de Souza,Ā comes another beautiful bookĀ about characters in crisis, with two stories crossing intriguingly into creative autobiography.
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āBetter known for his award-winning poetry, Cyril Wong delivers a medley of prose. High notes of the collection include the titular story, apparently autobiographical, and Cinema, the wistful story of two people separated by wealth and class but united in loneliness.ā
āAkshita Nanda, The Straits TimesāAn eclectic collection of short stories that is original and often deeply moving.ā
āDave Chua, author of The Beating and Other StoriesāCyril Wongās largely character-driven stories demonstrate clearly how they are inspired, in each case, when a personality passes through a moment of crisis, as in the tales of R. K. Narayan. Whether his people are young or adult, female or male, gay or straight, there is always a struggle and a revelation. Sometimes there is no resolution. Cyril writes with insight and sympathy about people in a Singapore spectrum that readers can identify with.ā
āRobert Yeo, playwright and author of The Adventures of Holden HengāWongās most recent work ā and possibly his last ā is a sensitive, introspective read, occasionally upsetting, but also enjoyable and surprisingly rivetingā¦Literature fans should grab a copy of this book and pin it proudly on their support pole, perhaps to remind the prolific writer of the imminent loss in the local literature scene should he hoist the white flag.ā
āMelissa Chang, npTribuneĀ -
Cyril WongĀ is the Singapore Literature Prize-winning author of poetry collections such asĀ Unmarked Treasure,Ā Tilting OurĀ Plates to Catch the LightĀ andĀ Satori Blues, as well as a collection of strange short fables calledĀ Let Me Tell You Something AboutĀ That Night. He has served as a mentor under the Creative Arts Programme and the Mentor Access Project, as well as aĀ judge for the Golden Point Awards in Singapore.
A past recipient of the National Arts Councilās Young Artist Award forĀ Literature, he completed his doctoral degree in English Literature at the National University of Singapore in 2012.Ā His books include poetry collectionsĀ Tilting Our Plates to Catch the LightĀ (2007) andĀ The Loverās InventoryĀ (2015), the novelĀ The Last Lesson of Mrs de SouzaĀ (2013) and short fiction collectionĀ Ten Things My Father Never Taught MeĀ (2014).
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Description
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
-
Recommended by the National Library Board Singapore and Ministry of Communications and Information
Look inside the book
Get the E-bookĀ Ā Listen to the audiobookA woman learns of a friendās illness and wonders if she ever truly knew him. A boy who sees ghosts heeds the advice ofĀ a fortune-teller, with surprising consequences. A girl wakes up and realises everybody in her Bedok neighbourhood hasĀ vanished.Ā From Cyril Wong,Ā award-winning author of The Last Lesson of Mrs de Souza,Ā comes another beautiful bookĀ about characters in crisis, with two stories crossing intriguingly into creative autobiography.
-
āBetter known for his award-winning poetry, Cyril Wong delivers a medley of prose. High notes of the collection include the titular story, apparently autobiographical, and Cinema, the wistful story of two people separated by wealth and class but united in loneliness.ā
āAkshita Nanda, The Straits TimesāAn eclectic collection of short stories that is original and often deeply moving.ā
āDave Chua, author of The Beating and Other StoriesāCyril Wongās largely character-driven stories demonstrate clearly how they are inspired, in each case, when a personality passes through a moment of crisis, as in the tales of R. K. Narayan. Whether his people are young or adult, female or male, gay or straight, there is always a struggle and a revelation. Sometimes there is no resolution. Cyril writes with insight and sympathy about people in a Singapore spectrum that readers can identify with.ā
āRobert Yeo, playwright and author of The Adventures of Holden HengāWongās most recent work ā and possibly his last ā is a sensitive, introspective read, occasionally upsetting, but also enjoyable and surprisingly rivetingā¦Literature fans should grab a copy of this book and pin it proudly on their support pole, perhaps to remind the prolific writer of the imminent loss in the local literature scene should he hoist the white flag.ā
āMelissa Chang, npTribuneĀ -
Cyril WongĀ is the Singapore Literature Prize-winning author of poetry collections such asĀ Unmarked Treasure,Ā Tilting OurĀ Plates to Catch the LightĀ andĀ Satori Blues, as well as a collection of strange short fables calledĀ Let Me Tell You Something AboutĀ That Night. He has served as a mentor under the Creative Arts Programme and the Mentor Access Project, as well as aĀ judge for the Golden Point Awards in Singapore.
A past recipient of the National Arts Councilās Young Artist Award forĀ Literature, he completed his doctoral degree in English Literature at the National University of Singapore in 2012.Ā His books include poetry collectionsĀ Tilting Our Plates to Catch the LightĀ (2007) andĀ The Loverās InventoryĀ (2015), the novelĀ The Last Lesson of Mrs de SouzaĀ (2013) and short fiction collectionĀ Ten Things My Father Never Taught MeĀ (2014).










