
We Do Not Make Love Here
- Description
- Praise
- Book Trailer
- About the Author
-
Shortlisted for Singapore Literature Prize 2024 (Fiction in English)
Shortlisted for Singapore Literature Prize 2024 (Best Debut: Fiction in English)Look inside the bookĀ Ā | Ā Get the e-book
Finalist for the 2022 Epigram Books Fiction Prize
Chandru, a third-generation Singaporean, realises his ambition through an arranged marriage. His wife, Meera, fights her fate by living a double life. Unhappily married, they make sense of their decisions through a study of their own past. Siddharth, their only son, is practically raised next door with their neighbourās granddaughter Malli.
As the childhood best friends grow up, they helplessly watch their tumultuous love tear them apart. A generation raised on the Singaporean dream gives birth to another sheltered in its shadows. They are not the marginalised or the oppressed, merely the majority doing their best. -
"One canāt help but feel emotionally connected to the characters in Nisha Mehrajās We Do Not Make Love Here. Each of them is a narrator in this complex family saga, sharing intimate details of their lives, seeking validation, or even justification, for their actions...as if they have never been heard, or seen. For the people closest to them are those whom they push away most."
āHaresh Sharma, resident playwright for The Necessary Stage
"A tightly focused story with an intense spotlight on the deep subjectivities of seemingly everyday ordinary people. The ebb and flow of the narrative, moving back and forth spatially and temporally, is sustained by the psychologies, psychoses, frustrations and anxieties that are so often the very atoms that make up the humanities within which all of us reside. Over it all is the mantel of time and how it flies: impervious, inexorable, indifferent and disinterested, peppered by love and hate, desires and disgust, attacks and retreats and, always, the implacable dissonance of experience. And found throughout is a strong, visceral presence of womenāas daughters, wives, mothers, girlfriends and workersāwhich serves to knit the story together. Profound."
āT. Sasitharan, cultural commentator, Cultural Medallion winner and EBFP 2022 judge -
Nisha Mehraj left full-time teaching and became a private tutor so she could pursue writing. The only home she has ever known is Singapore, yet she lives vicariously through her characters and escapes into the safety of the worlds she creates. It was her grandmotherās passion for life that fuelled Nisha's own ambitions; she'd like to think she made her proud. Her short story āChaiā was published in Mascara Literary Review in 2012. We Do Not Make Love Here is her first novel.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
- Description
- Praise
- Book Trailer
- About the Author
-
Shortlisted for Singapore Literature Prize 2024 (Fiction in English)
Shortlisted for Singapore Literature Prize 2024 (Best Debut: Fiction in English)Look inside the bookĀ Ā | Ā Get the e-book
Finalist for the 2022 Epigram Books Fiction Prize
Chandru, a third-generation Singaporean, realises his ambition through an arranged marriage. His wife, Meera, fights her fate by living a double life. Unhappily married, they make sense of their decisions through a study of their own past. Siddharth, their only son, is practically raised next door with their neighbourās granddaughter Malli.
As the childhood best friends grow up, they helplessly watch their tumultuous love tear them apart. A generation raised on the Singaporean dream gives birth to another sheltered in its shadows. They are not the marginalised or the oppressed, merely the majority doing their best. -
"One canāt help but feel emotionally connected to the characters in Nisha Mehrajās We Do Not Make Love Here. Each of them is a narrator in this complex family saga, sharing intimate details of their lives, seeking validation, or even justification, for their actions...as if they have never been heard, or seen. For the people closest to them are those whom they push away most."
āHaresh Sharma, resident playwright for The Necessary Stage
"A tightly focused story with an intense spotlight on the deep subjectivities of seemingly everyday ordinary people. The ebb and flow of the narrative, moving back and forth spatially and temporally, is sustained by the psychologies, psychoses, frustrations and anxieties that are so often the very atoms that make up the humanities within which all of us reside. Over it all is the mantel of time and how it flies: impervious, inexorable, indifferent and disinterested, peppered by love and hate, desires and disgust, attacks and retreats and, always, the implacable dissonance of experience. And found throughout is a strong, visceral presence of womenāas daughters, wives, mothers, girlfriends and workersāwhich serves to knit the story together. Profound."
āT. Sasitharan, cultural commentator, Cultural Medallion winner and EBFP 2022 judge -
Nisha Mehraj left full-time teaching and became a private tutor so she could pursue writing. The only home she has ever known is Singapore, yet she lives vicariously through her characters and escapes into the safety of the worlds she creates. It was her grandmotherās passion for life that fuelled Nisha's own ambitions; she'd like to think she made her proud. Her short story āChaiā was published in Mascara Literary Review in 2012. We Do Not Make Love Here is her first novel.




