“The Ocean Above Her” in PGS

Thank you to Kenneth Yu and Mia Tijam for giving my (sort of) science fiction fairytale “The Ocean Above her” a home in Philippine Genre Stories.

My wife and I both went through life-threatening illnesses over the last year, and consequently my writing productivity was very poor. I’m happy I managed to complete this story given how trying our circumstances were.

I had originally wanted to write a literal children’s fairy tale but I could not manage to keep the language simple enough for a pre-teen to understand without losing the heart of the story. Although this generation ship Sci-Fi story is no longer specifically written for kids, I hope I was able to capture that sense of wonder that children have when encountering something astonishing, as well as the bewilderment that comes when facing something as dark and painful as the death of someone they love.

I also wanted to challenge the notion that a far-future story had to be written in a cold, technobabble-filled manner. I wanted a future like the handwoven inabel blankets my grandmother used to buy for us when we were children – something warm, comforting and familiar.

My humble submission is PGS’ story for December, but it’s not a Christmas story. However if you want to read something about endings and beginnings, familial love, and the importance of remembering, please read The Ocean Above Her. If you like it, kindly leave me a comment or RT. Thank you!

From Cybertext to the Metaverse

Thank you to visual artist and technologist Debbie Ding for inviting Joses Ho and myself to conduct our discussion “From Cybertext to the Metaverse” at the Goethe Institute last 30 November. It was the first talk I ever gave that was done almost entirely in virtual reality . We visited 5 worlds that Debbie had created: Flowers, the Udon Bird Sanctuary, Cyberlove Suites, The Commuter and Lost Horizons. The latter was a vast library hidden at the fictional crash site of the (still missing).MH370 –it reminded me of my own Infinite Library. Great discussion on virtual worlds as art, ergodic literature, Reductionism, and world-building for open world games. [n.b. I should have asked how to change my avatar. It was a bit hard to maintain my dignity as an anthropomorphic yokai goldfish.]

More info here on Debbie Ding’s open studio exhibit: “The Psychogeographer’s Guide to Virtual Worlds”.

2024 Singapore Writers Fest Recap

It finally happened! After being a part of the Singapore Writers Festival since 2012, I have successfully made it to the opening ceremony. This time there were no overseas work trips, family emergencies, pandemics, or major health issues.

With author Claire Betita de Guzman and calligrapher Malik Mazlan.

Tech Talks: Exploring AI’s Impact on Literary Arts

Thank you to #SingaporeWritersFestival for organising and hosting a panel on the intersection between Artificial Intelligence and the literary arts last Saturday, with Arianne Saga, Daryl Lim Wei Jie, and Simon Chesterman. We talked about how AI affected the writing profession, copyrights and copyright law, as well as its impact on education. Notably, we also discussed whether the fair use provisions of SG’s Copyright Act covered GEN AI transformers or not. Lots of good questions from a very full house. I wish we had half a day to discuss.

Book Bar and the Infinite Library

I was surprised (but grateful) to see my short story collection, The Infinite Library and Other Stories, at the Bookbar in SWF 2024. I only had one panel this year, so I didn’t think they’d stock it.

With author Noelle de Jesus and M&O publisher Patricia Mulles (Thank you Pat for the photos!).