The Art and Craft of Asian Stories: A Writer's Guide and Anthology

The Art and Craft of Asian Stories: A Writer's Guide and Anthology

by Robin Hemley, Xu Xi
The Art and Craft of Asian Stories: A Writer's Guide and Anthology

The Art and Craft of Asian Stories: A Writer's Guide and Anthology

by Robin Hemley, Xu Xi

eBook

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Overview

An all-in-one craft guide and anthology, this is the first creative writing book to find inspiration and guidance in the diverse literary traditions of Asia. Including exemplary stories by leading writers from Japan, China, India, Singapore and beyond as well as those from Asian diasporas in Europe and America, The Art and Craft of Asian Stories offers an exciting take on the traditional how-to writing guide by drawing from a rich new trove of short stories beyond the western canon which readers may never have encountered before. Whilst still taking stock of the traditional elements of story such as character, viewpoint and setting, Xu and Hemley let these compelling stories speak for themselves to offer readers new ideas and approaches which could enrich their own creative work. Structured around the themes encountered in the stories, such as race and identity, history and power, family and aspirations, this text is a vital companion for writers at all levels keen to develop and find new perspectives on key elements of their craft.

Written by two internationally successful writers and teachers, each chapter contains complete short stories and writing exercises for practice and inspiration.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781350076563
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 09/23/2021
Series: Bloomsbury Writer's Guides and Anthologies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 695 KB

About the Author

Robin Hemley is Director of the George Polk School of Communications as well as Parsons Family Chair in Creative Writing, University Professor and Co-Chair of the MFA in Writing at LIU-Brooklyn, USA. He is also Professor Emeritus at The University of Iowa, USA, a graduate of The Iowa Writers' Workshop, and the award-winning author of 14 books of fiction and nonfiction.


Xu Xi is a prolific Indonesian Chinese novelist and author from Hong Kong and New York. Her recent books include This Fish is Fowl: Essays of Being (2019),a memoir Dear Hong Kong: Elegy for a City (2017) and the novel That Man in Our Lives (2016). She is Faculty Co-Director of the International MFA at Vermont College of Fine Arts, USA, where she previously served as faculty chair for their MFA in writing. She also established and directed Asia's first low-residency MFA at the City University of Hong Kong.
Xu Xi is a prolific Indonesian Chinese novelist and author from Hong Kong and New York. Her recent books include This Fish is Fowl: Essays of Being (2019), a memoir Dear Hong Kong: Elegy for a City (2017) and the novel That Man in Our Lives (2016). She is Faculty Co-Director of the International MFA at Vermont College of Fine Arts, USA, where she previously served as faculty chair for their MFA in writing. She also established and directed Asia's first low-residency MFA at the City University of Hong Kong.

Table of Contents

Credits and Permissions

Introduction

Chapter One: Family Matters
1. “The Brothers” Lysley Tenorio (USA)
2. “My Mother Pattu” Saras Manickam (Malaysia)

Chapter Two: Attraction
1. “Convince Me” Jiang Yitan (China) translated from Chinese (Mandarin) by Philip Hand
2. “No Toes” Michael Mohammed Ahmad (Australia)

Chapter Three: Routines
1. “We That Summer” Han Yujoo (Korea) translated from Korean by Janet Hong
2. “Birds” by Deepak Unnikrishnan (UAE)

Chapter Four: Little Fish
1. “A Clerk's Story” Dilip Kumar (India) translated from Tamil by Padma Narayanan
2. “National Day” Jeremy Tiang (Singapore)
3. “An Errand” Angelo Lacuesta, (Philippines)

Chapter Five: Shedding Skins
1. “All About Skin” Xu Xi (USA)
2. “Dragon Menu” Zhang Xinxin (China) translated from Chinese (Mandarin) by Helen Wang

Chapter Six: Invaders
1. “Farangs” Rattawut Lapcharoensap (USA)
2. “Boondocks” Robin Hemley (USA)

Chapter Seven: Diasporas
1. “The Boat” Nam Le (Australia)
2. “Dreams in English” Noelle Q. de Jesus (Philippines)

Chapter Eight: Mysteries
1. “The Door,” Dorothy Tse (Hong Kong) translated from Chinese (Cantonese) by Natascha Bruce
2. “Where did I Lose You?” Fan Xiaoqing (China) translated from Chinese (Mandarin) by Paul Harris

Chapter Nine: Taboos

1. “The Quilt,” Ismat Chughtai (India) translated from Urdu by Gopika Jadeja
2. “Video” Meera Nair (USA)
3. “Prayer in Training” Ploi Pirapokin (USA)

Chapter Ten: Histories

1. “Bee Honey” Yoshimoto Banana (Japan) translated from Japanese by Michael Emmerich
2. “Lee Kuan Yew is not Always the Answer” Inez Tan, (Singapore)

Chapter Eleven: Future Tense

1. “Pink” Hoshino Tomoyuki (Japan) translated from Japanese by Brian Bergstrom
2. “Learning Curve” Yeung Chak Yan (Hong Kong)

Index
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