Archive for April, 2008

The Flame Tree and Mindgame in the Press

“Yang-May Ooi has has a rare descriptive talent that brings the surroundings of her story… to vivid life” - New Straits Times, Malaysia

“Extremely readable and very entertaining legal thriller” - Marie-Claire, Malaysia

“Yang-May relays with vivid detail and sensitivity the impossible position of Asians who, to get ahead, must embrace a foreign culture whose interest in the East is based on greed and self-interest… a fast-paced, interesting read” - IS Magazine, Singapore

“… a polished thriller with a convincing portrait of a female protagonist” - Tatler, UK

“A highly-charged, highly-readable thriller. It’s also a fine portrait of a young Asian woman struggling to establish her identity in Western society… The Flame Tree is a gripping, intelligent debut from a writer with a future” - Sybil, UK

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Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, April 3rd, 2008 at 7:01pm

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Fusion View in the Press and New Media

Fusion View in the Press

The Star, one of the national newspapers in Malaysia, profiled Fusion View in their Bookshelf Section - click here for the full article.

Mslexia, the quarterly journal for women writers, has featured my podcast interview with Lucy Luck, the UK Literary Agent - see Mslexia Oct06.pdf. (You will need Adobe Acrobat to view the pdf file. Click “Back” on your toolbar to return to this page.)

Fusion View in New Media

“an incredibly rich and inspirational literary site that has gained recognition from fellow artists, writers and the literary web community in general” - 9rules Network

“A truly cross-cultural blog on writing and a whole lot more” - Imagined Community (http://imagined-community.com/blog/?p=29)

“Yang-May Ooi’s excellent East-West writing blog. Well worth a visit.” - Will Buckingham

My podcast on my “Two Voices” has also been picked up by a blogger in Perth, Australia who shares his experiences of speaking Australian English versus Malaysian English - see Ruminations

“If you are a Malaysian living overseas, you might feel at home at this site.” - Internet Newbie: the journey

Jon Yang, the author of The Rough Guide to Blogging has picked up on Fusion View on his own blog via The Star’s article about how I’ve been blogging to help my writing - see The Rough Guide to Blogging: The Blog

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Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, April 3rd, 2008 at 6:58pm

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Memories of Malaya - 7. Victoria Institution

My father continues his series on Memories of Malaya with an account of the renowned Victoria Institution.

He writes:

So the years came and went without any major mishaps: no illness or injuries to the body. However when I was in Standard two I had to be away from school for six months to have my right eye taken out because there was a growth inside it. I felt a little disorientated when I came back but I soon caught up with the work.

v-i This school where I was is called the Pasar Road School together with another school called the Batu Road School in another part of the town were the feeder schools of the grand secondary school called the Victoria Institution which had boys from form one to form five and later to form six, lower and upper. These three schools in the town of Kuala Lumpur were government schools which meant that they were built, maintained and had teachers all paid for by the colonial government administering Malaya and the boys had to pay only a token fee per month and one could be exempted if the school was satisfied that one’s family could not afford it and if a family had two boys in the school, one was automatically exempted. Eventually our family had 3 boys in the school but because father was a medical doctor we did not claim this privilege. Although Pasar Road School and Batu Road School were feeder schools it did not mean that all the boys were automatically fed into the V.I. Form one of the V.I. could take only 200 boys; the total number of boys in the class before Form one in both the feeder schools amounted to 400. So this meant that fifty percent had to be eliminated by means of a common entrance examination set for both schools. Those who did not make it to the V.I. had to find either jobs or join trade schools. The common entrance examination was a vigorous one but I was extremely happy to have been placed fourth in the combined results of 400 boys.

So I had realized one of the aspirations of every school boy to be a student of the Victoria Institution (V.I.). The V.I. is set in the town of Kuala Lumpur which is the capital city of the state of Selangor as well as of Malaya. The school is a solid building of two storeys standing on a slight hill. It has a playing field the size of six football fields and it has a swimming pool which is unique for a school. It also had science laboratories and other schools would send their students there when they had to do sixth form science.

The British Colonial Administration in the 1850s found the educational facilities inadequate for a regular supply of junior grade administrative and clerical officers who had hitherto been recruited from India and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). The founding of a school was mooted. With the lead provided by a British Resident donations were collected from magnates of the three races to build the school. Most of them are still remembered by the names of the school houses.

The school was ready to take in students in July 1884. It was then in another location and being near a river it was continually flooded during the monsoon seasons. Eventually it was moved to the present location where it stands till today.

Photo: thanks to kelvolution from flickr.com (CCL)

memmlya

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008 at 1:00am

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Portrait of Yang-May Ooi

Fusion View is created by Yang-May Ooi, author of The Flame Tree and Mindgame, legal thrillers set in Malaysia and London, first published by Hodder & Stoughton.

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