Monday

This is Business!: My Life as a Singapore Gangster II
Foo Yin Tung
Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Editions, 2012
ISBN: 9789814382021

Away from prying eyes, in hidden alleys and on invisible streets lies an underworld, privy only to those who know where to find it. A world built on trust, loyalty, blood and fueled by money and power.

Foo Yin Tung has worked hard to get to where he is. He now oversees his gang's online gambling and casinos and has a plan to expand his territory; a plan that will not only see him recognized by his chief, but also rid him of a rival gang.

But blood begets blood and Yin Tung soon finds himself embroiled in the middle of a war - a war for territory, for pride, and to protect the ones he loves. Immerse yourself in this compelling, gritty and honest account of one man's life in the underbelly of Singapore.
In the Mood for Cheongsam: A Social History, 1920s - Present
Lee Chor Lin & Chung May Khuen
Singapore: Editions Didier Millet, 2012
ISBN: 9789814260923

Spanning almost a century, this book examines the origins and development of the cheongsam in the social context of Singapore since its introduction from Shanghai, China, in the 1920s to the present day.

The cheongsam, a one-piece Chinese ladies' dress, was the epitome of Chinese identity and feminine beauty during the middle decades of the 20th century. Initially seen as a symbol of a trendy, new, Republican China, shorn of the shackles of the imperial system, the cheongsam soon adopted intellectual overtones, and was favoured by the sophisticated and society's elite at elaborate social functions. When it was abandoned following the success of the Communist Party in China, the cheongsam survived in Singapore as the garment of choice for independent, educated women. Over the years it has risen and fallen in popularity and been revived and re-interpreted for new generations by designers such as Tan Sheau Yun and Priscilla Shunmugan.

Containing extensive archival photographs and showcasing the collection of the National Museum of Singapore (NMS), this book goes beyond a mere study of the garment itself, but places it in context as a symbol of a people and emblem of its times, as well as the role it played in Singapore's social scene. The book will interest both serious social historians and amateur enthusiasts alike.