The
Asia Literary Review is the first magazine of its kind in the Asian literary world. An exciting English language quarterly devoted to reportage, documentary photography, travel writing, fiction and memoir, it is set to become essential reading around the world for anyone with a serious interest in Asia and the best writing from and about the region. The
Asia Literary Review follows the tradition of successful literary journals published in Europe and the USA by providing a view of the world that combines new fiction with eye-witness accounts and polemic. Addressing the needs of intelligent readers, every quarterly issue extends to some 200 pages and contains the work of celebrated and established writers as well as new voices from Istanbul to north Japan. In this issue:
- Rana Dasgupta on Indian writing and the state of the modern novel
- Memories of My Flute Teacher : Reflections of a dissident on life in a Chinese prison
- Farewell to Shanghai Jim Duncan Hewitt on the influence of Shanghai in the life and writing of JG Ballard
- New fiction by Nam Le (Australia), Jaina Sanga (India), Jill Widner (Philippines) and Pham Hai Anh (Vietnam)
- Photo essay: Hanuman s Army - India s kushti wrestlers