Charlene Rajendran

Charlene Rajendran (born 1964 in Malacca) is a Malaysian writer based in Singapore. She currently teaches theatre at the Nanyang Technological University.

Published works

Rajendran's first book was a collection of poetry called Mangosteen Crumble (Team East, 1999). It explored issues of identity and difference, often by using Malaysian English syntax.[1] It is now out of print, and the entire contents have been placed online.[2]

Her second book was Taxi Tales on a Crooked Bridge (Matahari Books, 2009), a non-fiction book based on her conversations with the taxi-drivers of Singapore, where she now lives. This quirky book also includes some poetry and photography. It debuted at No. 2 on the MPH Local Non-Fiction best-seller list for the week ending 17 May 2009.[3]

gollark: ... that is the wrong one.
gollark: Okay, now give me your `~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub` file (NOT the one not ending in .pub) and I can thingy the stuff.
gollark: What username?
gollark: Then you would do `ssh [account name]@osmarks.net -p 233` to access the HNodeā„¢.
gollark: Well, you are to `ssh-keygen` to create a key, and then you can send me the public key file for your account.

References

  1. Looking for England Archived 23 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine paper by Charlene Rajendran at the British Council
  2. Mangosteen Crumble online
  3. "Charlene debuts at #2" by Amir Muhammad


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