Reviews

Singa-Pura-Pura by Nazry Bahrawi

rebeccazh's review

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4.0

3.5 stars, with some stories I enjoyed more and others less, as is typical with an anthology. With the recent talk and discussion about AI chatbots like ChatGPT, this book was in some ways an imaginative response to these debates. I especially enjoyed the middle section that collected stories reimagining a futuristic Singapore. Quite funny to see the heavy presence of the state in almost every story, the almost absurd adherence to rules and regulations and the Singapore obsession with collecting points to get a certain grade.

purging's review

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4.0

While reading Singa Pura-Pura, I can relate to most of the stories. Which leads me, as an Indonesian, to have this question: how do you identify yourself? Is it by the skin color? religion? language?

My favorite story from this book is "Doa.com".

This story describes about a workaholic person who still finds time to visit his parent's grave and pray for them.
The interpretation is amusing, because, in my childhood, I have always been taught to always pray for my parents.
Then from this story I imagined how the meaning of "praying for your parents" shifted so that humans could create "pre-recorded recitations".

Because humans are too busy with their work and life, but they cannot be separated from the 'budaya' that has been taught for generations.

itzreibrary's review

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4.0

Singa Pura-pura merupakan kumpulan kisah fiksi spekulatif yang ditulis oleh para penulis Melayu-Singapura. Terdiri atas 13 cerpen yang dibagi ke dalam 4 bagian. Di bagian pertama, Spectres of Sihir, cerita bertema mistis, yang sepertinya memang sudah sangat lekat dengan budaya Melayu. Bagian 2, 3, dan 4 mayoritas bercerita tentang kondisi Singapura di masa depan, di mana teknologi sudah sangat maju dan bagaimana kehidupan masyarakat sosialnya sudah sangat dipengaruhi oleh hal ini.

Ada sistem pemakaman dan ziarah kubur yang sangat canggih. Pemakaman dibangun di bawah tanah dengan sistem seperti apartemen 30 lantai full AC dengan ribuan makam di setiap lantainya. Setiap makam memiliki slot untuk smartcard. Langkahnya sebagai berikut: 1)Beli smartcard berisi doa pilihanmu dengan kartu kredit 2)Masukkan smartcardmu ke dalam slot di makam, 3) doa pilihanmu akan otomatis berkumandang dari speaker (doa yang paling populer: surat Yasin, doa selamat dan tahlil). Canggih bukan? Tetapi pada suatu saat Lukman datang untuk mengunjungi makam kedua orang tuanya, tempat pembelian smartcard semuanya sedang rusak atau diperbaiki, meninggalkan Lukman kebingungan karena ia tak bisa mengaji dan tak hafal satupun ayat untuk mendoakan kedua orang tuanya.

Di Singapura masa depan, masyarakat hidup dengan poin dan ranking. Datang tepat waktu ke tempat kerja: +5 poin. Melanggar lalu lintas: -35 poin. Bayar pajak lebih awal: 100 poin. Mengurus orang tua yang sudah renta: 50 poin. Poin ini hanya diperoleh warga negara asli, harus merupakan usaha sendiri, dan tidak dapat diwariskan. Target Wak Dolah adalah mencapai 100.000 poin yang akan menempatkannya di ranking tertinggi, Ranking Pensiunan. Berbagai fasilitas dan keistimewaan akan didapat orang-orang dengan ranking ini, seperti fasilitas kesehatan gratis, sandang dan pangan setengah harga, dan cicilan rumah yang tersisa otomatis lunas. Wak Dolah bekerja keras membanting tulang sejak remaja demi masa tua yang nyaman. Pada usia 80 tahun, Wak Dolah masih bekerja dan poinnya sudah mencapai 99.950. 50 poin lagi targetnya tercapai dan ia bisa menempati Ranking Pensiunan dan akhirnya bisa berhenti bekerja dan hidup nyaman....atau, bisakah?

Dua cerita di atas merupakan cerpen yang paling berkesan bagiku. Tepat setelah aku membaca How High We Go In The Dark, berikutnya aku membaca tentang warga Melayu-Singapura yang ternyata keturunan penduduk planet lain, tentang robot yang menggantikan peran psikiater, tentang asisten dan teman curhat digital, dan penduduk Singapura yang sibuk bersiap-siap bermigrasi ke BHUMII, alias planet baru yang belum rusak seperti Bumi.

Walau cerpen-cerpen ini disajikan dalam Bahasa Inggris, namun nuansa Melayunya sangat kental terasa, seperti otomatis saja aku membaca beberapa bagian dengan logat Melayu dalam hati (salahkan Upin dan Ipin). Penuturannya ringan bahkan kocak di banyak bagian, namun banyak cerpen yang langsung menyentil nurani. Buku yang menghibur dan asyik.

rebeccazh's review against another edition

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4.0

3.5 stars, with some stories I enjoyed more and others less, as is typical with an anthology. With the recent talk and discussion about AI chatbots like ChatGPT, this book was in some ways an imaginative response to these debates. I especially enjoyed the middle section that collected stories reimagining a futuristic Singapore. Quite funny to see the heavy presence of the state in almost every story, the almost absurd adherence to rules and regulations and the Singapore obsession with collecting points to get a certain grade.

literary_hazelnut's review

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adventurous mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

chaconne's review against another edition

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adventurous reflective medium-paced

4.5

symulakrum's review

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3.0

3.5

negated's review

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adventurous reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix

3.25

dreamsinfiction's review

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adventurous medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.0

A mix of Malay fiction stories which is already a refreshing tale to start with. However, some stories felt a little flat and there were a lot of Malay terms used which I’m not sure would be inclusive to non-Malay speaking readers. I only discovered the glossary of terms at the end of the book after finishing the book which was a shame. The foreword could have made a mention of this. 

nevenaivanova's review

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This anthology is a beautiful reminder of why I love speculative fiction.