This Siti Never Sleeps At Night

Living my main character moment


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Book Review: Crazy Rich Asians

Crazy Rich Asians (Crazy Rich Asians #1)Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan

My rating: 1 of 5 stars

Before I bought the book, I heard a lot of it. I mean, in terms of it being adapted into a Hollywood movie and it’s all going to be filled with Asian actors and was shot in Singapore – that part of it.

I thought: “Oh, that’s cool! I should read the book before the movie releases then.”

I should not have done that. Why did I waste SGD 27.77 for this book?

10 pages in and I was bored but I thought, maybe it’s not that bad and I should give it a chance.

28 pages in and I actually sighed in the middle of my train ride to work and rolled my eyes, really rolled my eyes.

I am fine with tiny annotations at the bottom explaining the Singlish, Hokkien, Cantonese and Malay terms mentioned in the book. Totally fine with foreigners who read the book and give them a slight taste of Singapore culture.

But what I’m not fine with is butchering my ethnic language – Malay. The author butchered it.

28 pages in and I saw the word “ta pah kay”. I thought: “Hmm… is it a Hokkien or Cantonese word?” So I went and read the annotation at the bottom: “Malay for ‘not accurate'”. I was suddenly hit with a possible ethnicity crisis. I am born Malay, talk in Malay language for 33 years of my life, worked as a Malay language translator for 4.5 years out of 12 years of my working life, scored a distinction in Malay language and never have I came across the word “ta pah kay”.

So, I re-read the statement in the book “Daisy, your information is always ta pah kay.” I went through it over and over in my head and I realized the author is trying to say “Daisy, your information is always tak boleh pakai.” Malays would use this to let someone know that their words are not useful and/or not trustworthy. “Tidak boleh pakai” is more grammatically proper. “Tak boleh pakai” is words used in everyday conversations. It could also mean not able to wear something. For example: “Baju ini tidak boleh pakai lagi” – “This clothes cannot be worn any longer”. “Ta pah kay”, on the other hand, is a Singlish term used by literally anyone and everyone who is born and bred in Singapore and/or lived here for so long and used Singlish like it’s their second skin. It’s Singlish. Not Malay.

What irks me and made me stop reading the book and put it into my “We are never ever ever getting back together” book bin is that the author did not even show any effort in trying to find out the correct Malay term for it and just plainly and falsely put the information that it’s a Malay word for everyone to read. Foreigners would think that’s a Malay word and will go to Malaysia or Singapore and say the word and will be hit with confused Malays.

Apart from that, the writing is quite slipshod. I was not enticed to read further and seeing the above made me give up completely.

Whether I would give the movie a chance is another question. After the book, I’m not so sure.

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Book Review: The Devotion of Suspect X

The Devotion of Suspect X (Detective Galileo #3)The Devotion of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book was one of the books recommended by Kai (or Kim Jongin) from EXO and I decided to give it a shot. I didn’t regret the decision at all. I can’t read Japanese so I have no idea how it is in its original form but I’m pretty sure the translated version still keeps the essence of it. In the first few pages, it’s a little slow and draggy – it feels like I was reading an anime/manga but with no pictures or artistic impressions of it. But it picks up pace later on and I lost sleep just trying to finish a chapter or two. As someone who does love crime thriller books, it is right up my alley. I understand why it has a cult following in Japan.

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Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore (Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore, #1)Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book was recommended to me by a passing stranger. And boy, I don’t regret reading it at all. It’s been on my bookshelves for years before I decided to pick it up and read and I got it for real cheap at a bookfair.

It’s an amazing ride from start to finish. The voice of the main character, Clay Jannon, resonates to me. He’s like every unemployed young person trying to find their place in the world but never lost that positivity and humour, which something I can relate to. Not the unemployed part, the finding their place in the world part, of course.

The book is full of adventure and mystery but humourous and inspiring as well. It’s a joy to read. I recommend it to anyone. You don’t have to be someone else. Sometimes, what you have and who you are is enough.

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Review: Red Rising

Red Rising
Red Rising by Pierce Brown
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is what happens when you don’t read the publication year/date/whatever – you didn’t realize that the book is super new that the next book is not out yet and now you’re gorydamn depressed because oh my god, what is going to happen?

That is exactly what’s happening to me right now. I am feeling so lost and the last time I felt that way was “Harry Potter” when I had to wait year after year for the next book to come out. So I did a little googling and by Zeus, I have to wait till next year for the sequel? Who do I have to kill to get the advanced copy?!

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Review: Son of a Witch

Son of a Witch
Son of a Witch by Gregory Maguire
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Well, this book took too long for me to finish – partly because I was distracted by YouTube and partly because I found it boring and slightly confusing in the beginning. But I finally did get how the book is structured and actually enjoyed it. It’s kind of like baking a cake – in the beginning, you have to put the flour, egg and sugar and mix them all up nicely before you put other more interesting ingredients to bake whatever cake you want. This book is just like that.

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