Title | : | Spaces: People/Places |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
ISBN-10 | : | 9789811111907 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 200 |
Publication | : | First published November 1, 2016 |
Spaces: People/Places Reviews
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This collection is like a box of chocolates. You don't know what flavour it'll be, but you know for sure it'll be delicious. Each short story was amazingly written, and I genuinely enjoyed how versatile and colourful Tay's writing is. After finishing each story, I found myself taking a deep breath to process how beautiful it was. Friendly note though that there is sex and violence in some stories, so this would be a great book for a slightly older audience. Each story resonates by being familiar enough to be understood, and portrayed deliciously. You'll be in for a treat!
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Sometimes the writing is unnecessarily fleshed out in very unnecessary places
It's actually my writing style too but now I know that not everyone likes it -
After a visit to the Peranakan Museum in Singapore, I chanced by a curious vending machine. Inside were rows of books, wrapped so as to obscure the title and author. Knowing that I would probably regret it if I didn't roll the dice, I gave the machine the S$20 ($15 US) and made my selection (A-4). My reward was Spaces: People/Places.
Verena Tay, a Singaporean writer and playwright, gives a collection of short stories set amidst Singapore's fast-changing landscape. While Tay says that her work explores the relationship between people and the places that they inhabit, I found the work (with the exception of one or two of the stories within) to center around the sadness that accompanies transitions, whether it is when a fond acquaintance leaves for work elsewhere, when a person leaves the home that they raised a family in, or dealing with the oppressive modernity of high-tech buildings. This leads to an easy-to-read, yet thought-provoking collections, which I would highly recommend not only to residents of Singapore, but to those who want to explore the feelings of sadness associated with the transitions we encounter in life. For me, this was S$20 (again, $15 US) well spent.