Friday, January 9, 2015

Quarterly Literary Review Singapore (QLRS)

For those of you who like to read stories, poems and/or essays, why not take a peek at some contemporary Singapore literature at www.qlrs.com

The standards are considerably high and I think you will enjoy this acquaintance will Singapore literature.

As sourced from their web site, this is the raison d'etre and workings of QLRS:-

"QLRS (in full, the Quarterly Literary Review Singapore) is the Internet literary journal of Singapore. Our mission is to promote the literary arts in Singapore, to stimulate the feedback mechanisms in the literary scene, and to develop Singaporean writers to international standards. Our standards are therefore high, and our paradigms are the TLSes and LRBs of this world. We believe that good writing can and will emerge in Singapore, and we aim to aid that process by applying rigorous critical and editorial criteria.

To that extent, QLRS is also nonpartisan. In many writing scenes around the world, too much energy is expended in getting into the right cliques. We aim to let quality of writing be the only benchmark. It may of course be argued that ‘quality’ is itself subjective. We gain objectivity by opening submissions to consideration by and across a pool of editors, each of whom have different conceptions of quality.

QLRS is a non-profit volunteer collective. Although its startup financing was through commitments from individuals, advertisement revenue is incidental and aimed at covering operating costs. We are thankful for the time, editorial and resource commitments of our volunteers and sponsor organizations.

Our editorial team currently comprises:

Chief/Poetry: Toh Hsien Min
Short Stories: Yeow Kai Chai
Essays: Yong Shu Hoong
Criticism: Ng Wei Chian
Interviews: Yong Shu Hoong
Extra Media: Ng Wei Chian
The Acid Tongue: Cyril Wong

Our other (non-editorial) affiliates are:
Technical: Alvin Pang
Facebook: Stephanie Ye

The views and opinions expressed in the journal are entirely those of the respective contributors and must not be construed to be the views and opinions of QLRS, its editors and/or its affiliates."

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