Category: books

  • Ubud Writers Festival: freedom, strings attached

    The 2024 Ubud Writers and Readers Festival in Bali runs October 23-27. “After our 20th anniversary, we are excited to build on last year’s success by offering an even more eclectic program of events and joy, alongside bold visions for the future,” festival founder and director Janet DeNeefe says.

    This 21st edition of the festival features my former CNN colleague Maria Ressa providing perspectives on journalism and press freedom in these troubling times of disinformation and rising authoritarianism. Also addressing the topic Paul Caruana Galizia, son of assassinated Maltese investigative reporter Daphne Caruana Galizia, and Drew Ambrose, whose current Al Jazeera series Flattening the Curve examines the uneven global response to Covid-19 and its implications moving forward.

    Indonesian national icon for press freedom as well as the arts and letters Goenawan Mohamad will premiere his adaptation of Don Quixote for wayang golek, traditional wooden puppets. Other host country literary stars coming to Ubud this year include Cigarette Girl (Gadis Kretek) author Ratih Kumala, plus Dee Lestari, Ayu Utami and Agustinus Wibowo, each to talk about their latest works. There’s also a tribute to Pramoedya Ananta Toer, imprisoned under Suharto’s New Order regime, featuring the novelist’s 87 year old brother Soesilo Toer.

    Goenawan Mohamad

    “We take pride in shining a spotlight on this vast yet often overlooked nation’s writers, artists, thinkers, and performers, with the hope that the world will one day recognize their talent, just as we do,” DeNeefe says.

    The festival in picturesque Ubud will also host best selling UK historians William Dalrymple, Ben Bland and Sathnam Sanghera, celebrated Indian novelist Amitav Ghost, French-Chinese American writer Aube Rey Lescure and dozens of others, appearing in a relaxed, intimate setting. Plus there’s music, film, poetry and, yes, puppetry at one of the world’s top literary events, well worth a trip from anywhere.

    Former US diplomat and broadcast news producer Muhammad Cohen is Asia editor at large for iGaming Business, a longtime contributor to Forbes, columnist for Asia Times and author of Hong Kong On Air, a novel set in his adopted hometown during the 1997 handover about TV news, love, betrayal, high finance, and cheap lingerie. See his biography, online archive and more at www.muhammadcohen.com; follow him on Facebook, ex-Twitter @MuhammadCohen and LinkedIn.

  • Adios, Gabriel Garcia Marquez

    Calling Gabriel Garcia Marquez one of the all-time best Spanish language writers is as silly as calling Babe Ruth one of the all-time best English language baseball players. Love in the Time of Cholera is the greatest love story ever told by one of the greatest story tellers ever.

    Garcia Marquez’s work will enrich our world as long as there are readers. Muchas gracias, senor.

    Totally globalized native New Yorker and former broadcast news producer Muhammad Cohen is a blogger for Forbes and author of Hong Kong On Air, a novel set in his adopted hometown during the 1997 handover about television news, love, betrayal, high finance, and cheap lingerie. See his bio, online archive and more at www.muhammadcohen.com; follow him on Facebook and Twitter @MuhammadCohen.

  • Adios, Gabriel Garcia Marquez

    Calling Gabriel Garcia Marquez one of the all-time best Spanish language writers is as silly as calling Babe Ruth one of the all-time best English language baseball players. Love in the Time of Cholera is the greatest love story ever told by one of the greatest story tellers ever.

    Garcia Marquez’s work will enrich our world as long as there are readers. Muchas gracias, senor.

    Totally globalized native New Yorker and former broadcast news producer Muhammad Cohen is a blogger for Forbes and author of Hong Kong On Air, a novel set in his adopted hometown during the 1997 handover about television news, love, betrayal, high finance, and cheap lingerie. See his bio, online archive and more at www.muhammadcohen.com; follow him on Facebook and Twitter @MuhammadCohen.

  • Giving thanks for Doris Lessing

    When giving thanks this holiday weekend, have a good thought for the long life of Doris Lessing, the marvelous writer who died on November 17 at age 94. Assessments of Lessing often label her a feminist. Lessing herself rejected that label even before renouncing all “isms.” No doubt Lessing’s life and her signature work, The Golden Notebook extended the boundaries for women, but her writing bagged far bigger game.

    Lessing was the great chronicler of how the human mind processes emotion. She explained psychology far better than any textbook through case studies of her hundreds of characters. As I glided through her Children of Violence series on colonial life in Africa and repatriation – Martha Quest (the heroine’s fabulously apt name), A Proper Marriage, A Ripple From the Storm, Landlocked and The Four-Gated City – I’d sigh after reading a passage that delved into a character’s feelings, thinking, “I wish I could write like that.”

    Whether the subject was human connections, as in Love, Again, or politics and violence, as in The Good Terrorist, her characters’ situations became the reader’s own here and now as they struggled to plot a course that was true to their own moral compass, however buffeted by their own times it may be.

    The selection committee righted a great wrong when it awarded Lessing the Nobel Prize for literature in 2007. It’s too late to do justice to John Updike, whose Rabbit Angstrom books tell the tale of postwar America better than any history book, and who could simply write the heck out of any subject. But it’s not too late for Philip Roth. The Ghost Writer is, along with The Great Gatsby, the best American novel you can read in a day. The Human Stain is the best thing I’ve read this century.

    Totally globalized native New Yorker and former broadcast news producer Muhammad Cohen is author of Hong Kong On Air, a novel set in his adopted hometown during the 1997 handover about television news, love, betrayal, high finance, and cheap lingerie. See his bio, online archive and more at www.muhammadcohen.com; follow him on Facebook and Twitter @MuhammadCohen.