/ Issue ⑩

We’re counting down to #SPWM23 with a spotlight on the poems we loved last year.

From now till end Mar 2023, Issue ⑩ will be scattering its seeds over a 10-week period in the hope that it takes root and gives rise to moments of inspiration. Rather than appoint an editorial team to curate the best of Singapore Poetry Writing Month 2022, SingPoWriMo.com will be publishing poems personally handpicked by our stable of #SPWM22 senior moderators. As always: poetry is coming.


Poetry selections, interviews and commentary
by Ang Shuang, Jennifer Anne Champion, Tse Hao Guang, Ng Yi-Sheng & Stephanie Dogfoot


/ STEPHANIE DOGFOOT

(also known as Stephanie Chan) lives in Singapore and has been writing poetry ever since her first gerbil died when she was 11. The author of Roadkill for Beginners, a poetry collection published by Math Paper Press, she is both a Singapore (2010) and UK Slam (2012) champion and has represented both countries in international poetry slams. Her work has been featured at the Melbourne Spoken Word Festival, the George Town Literary Festival, Ubud Writers and Readers Festival, Glastonbury Festival and many others. She has toured Germany, Australia, Southeast Asia and North America with her poetry. She currently curates and hosts a monthly poetry night called Spoke & Bird which features local and international poets.


/ Ng Yi-SHENG

is a writer, researcher & activist from Singapore. His most recent works include the short story collection Lion City (2018), a co-winner of the 2020 Singapore Literature Prize, and EXHALE: an Anthology of Queer Singapore Voices (2021), co-edited with Stephanie Chan, Andy Ang, Ang Jin Yong, Tan Boon Hui, Atifa Othman & Kokila Annamalai.

“When you're devising prompts as a senior moderator, you feel a sense of power—what devilish new tasks shall I set my poor underlings to do today? But reading the responses cuts you down to size: the SPWM community always knows how to surprise you by taking your stimuli in unexpected, and unexpectedly sublime, directions.

Yong Shu Hoong's ‘Chris’ is a prime example. I created the X'Ho Prompt to remind a younger generation of writers that there were punk voices in Singapore long before them, namely in the figure of X'Ho, DJ and subversive queer writer, who passed on 27 September 2021 at the age of ‘forever 27’. I didn't foresee that a poet older than me, one intimately acquainted with my subject, would pen a far more personal and moving obituary than I ever could.”


/ TSE HAO GUANG

is the author of The International Left-Hand Calligraphy Association (Tinfish Press, 2023) and Deeds of Light (Math Paper Press, 2015). He edited the new edition of Wong May’s A Bad Girl’s Book of Animals (Ethos Books, 2023), the anthologies Food Republic (Landmark Books, 2021) and UnFree Verse (Ethos Books, 2017), and the e-journal OF ZOOS. His poems appear in Poetry, Poem-a-Day, Dreginald, New Delta Review, Big Other, and elsewhere. www.tsehaoguang.com.

“Picking these poems has been an exercise in unfairness. I say this because my prompts were intended to (re)focus attention to the process of writing, which I felt would be most useful for a large, years-long writing group. Perhaps with the right nudges and prompts, we might be able to break out of our cynicism and find a way to re-engage with the mystery of writing. To single these few poems out feels like a betrayal of that instinct! Please take my picks in that spirit. Entire prompts go unrepresented, while others are represented by multiple poems. There are quiet epiphanies that some of us must have experienced that did not translate into a product. I’ll try to fail better next time.”


/ JENNIFER ANNE CHAMPION

has published two collections of poetry and has been featured in numerous anthologies in Singapore and abroad. She is a co-founder of poetry.sg and served as its multimedia editor. Currently, Jennifer’s practice is grounded in slow crafts and mindfulness. She was a digital writer-in-residence with the National Centre for Writing (UK) for her work in poetry and textiles. Her poetry and textile works have also been on display with Art Outreach Singapore and NUS EMCC.


/ Ang Shuang

is the author of the poetry collection How to Live With Yourself (Math Paper Press, 2022). A Best of the Net nominee, Shuang holds an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College. Her work has been seen in The Rumpus, Wildness and various SingPoWriMo publications.