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December 3, 2008 Wednesday
Updated
Dec 3, 2008
Last Boy comes up tops
Ng Yi-Sheng is youngest Singapore Literature Prize winner.
By Stephanie Yap
Ng Yi-Sheng, a full-time writer, beat four others with his debut poetry collection, Last Boy. -- ST PHOTO: CAROLINE CHIA

WRITER Ng Yi-Sheng, 28, is this year's Singapore Literature Prize winner in the English category.

According to the National Book Development Council which organises the awards, he is the youngest-ever recipient of the $10,000 top prize, which has been awarded biennially since 1992.

He received it on Wednesday night from Dr. Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports, in a ceremony at The Arts House.

Ng, a full-time writer, beat four others with his debut poetry collection, Last Boy.

Said Ng of his win: 'I was pretty sure I was not going to get it, as I was going up against such experienced writers as Suchen Christine Lim and Elmo Jayawardena.'

Lim won the inaugural prize in 1992 and Jayawardena, a Sri Lankan citizen and Singapore permanent resident, won Sri Lanka's Gratiaen Award in 2001.

On his 28th birthday last Tuesday, Ng received the good news in the mail.

He said that Last Boy, published by firstfruits in 2006, spans eight years of his life, with the earliest poem written back when he was in his second year in junior college.

He started seriously working on a collection while studying at Columbia University in New York.

'It is the best of eight years. The collection is eclectic as a lot of the poems were created in class and thus derived from different writing exercises,' he said.

'It is really about a person finding himself and defining himself culturally and sexually. That is what a liberal arts education is all about,' he added with a laugh.

According to the panel of three judges - associate professor Rajeev S. Patke and assistant professor Gwee Li Sui, both from the National University of Singapore, and Life! arts correspondent Deepika Shetty, the decision to award Ng the prize was unanimous.

Said Dr Patke, head of the panel: 'We thought it the most original and lively of the entries. It is exuberant, cheeky and is not afraid to take risks."

But Ng thinks that some books which were not shortlisted for the prize this year are better than his, such as two by Cyril Wong, the joint winner of the same prize in 2006.

'I can understand rationally the motivation for not nominating him again, but it really is pai seh (Hokkien for embarassing) as I feel he is exponentially better than me and yet I am getting twice the prize money he did,' he said of Wong, who split the 2006 award with Yong Shu Hoong.

The Singapore Literature Prize recognises works in English, Chinese, Malay and Tamil language categories.

Winners in the other categories this year include writers Chia Hwee Pheng and Yeng Pway Ngon, who tied in the Chinese category; poet and novelist Mohamed Latiff Mohamed in the Malay category; and Tamil Murasu news editor K. Kanagalatha in the Tamil category.

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