Book review: Poet Wahidah Tambee's Eke is a mesmerising archipelago of letters
By Wahidah Tambee
Poetry/Gaudy Boy/Paperback/106 pages/$19
Each poem is an island – no, an islet – in Singaporean poet Wahidah Tambee's typographically dense Eke. Words, often just letters, cluster around a single patch of each page, such that thumbing through the collection feels like one is rifling through a folio of 40 old maps to a lost archipelago in a white sea.
An excerpt from poet Wahidah Tambee's typographically dense Eke (2025).
PHOTO: GAUDY BOY
Where then do these 40 concrete poems in this mesmerising debut collection point the reader to? The poems' inability to speak in the genre's lingua franca – continents of stanzas, the latitude of the line – make visible the difficulty in articulating some themes that float throughout the book: grief, terror and erasure, among others.
But not all the poems deal with such aphasia turned into visual stutters. A poem like 'sunrise' can read like a simple visual translation of the nature poem – austere in its execution, a few ambiguous brushstrokes conjuring the entire landscape.
Each poem makes do with its scarce resources – alphabetically (10 letters in the opening poem) and typographically (sized like a thumb). With overlapping leading (that is, the space between lines of type), they invite multiple ways of reading – does this one say 'letter / let us tell her / she left us' or 'letters / terse / tell us she let us'?
After all, the art of being an islet is the art of ekeing out an existence from not much. An islet's existence is improbable and ephemeral – two Indonesian islands vanished in 2020 and a chain of West African islands is on the brink of disappearing.
These poems assert themselves on the page even as they appear like they are sinking or resemble eraser dust on the page (see the poem 'erasuredust').
Like islets, Wahidah's poems are places for the visitor to project his or her fantasies – they do not take their sovereignty for granted. In her poems, the word 'dismiss' is contiguous with 'missile', a stumble away from 'dismally' (which contains the word 'ally') and 'mull'.
Thus, the poems in Eke are not so much texts as they are musical scores – inviting the reader to interpret and improvise. The poet's own performances of the poems at multiple readings this reviewer has attended are but one entry point into the poems, but they are by no means authoritative versions of these slippery creatures.
In its stuttering and attempt to find a language for the inexpressible, Eke is reminiscent of prominent poetic antecedents. For example, Canadian poet M. NourbeSe Philip's Zong! (2008) erases legal documents from a 1781 massacre of around 150 enslaved Africans to stir up a voice from a voiceless people. The American modernist Gertrude Stein's playful and cubist deconstruction of syntax in poetry also countered the representational arts.
In the book's afterword, Wahidah writes that her fragments 'recreate the mental interjections or the thought-flood of overthinking caused by polysemantic words, ambiguous situations, and hyperactive word-meaning activations'.
But the poems in Eke are not quite backed by the conceptual heft and rigour that lend weight to the formal experimentation with language's deconstruction and erasure.
Still, these are poems attuned to the minutiae of language – its sounds, constituent letters and polysemy. Each word, in Wahidah's hand, contains an excess of a dozen meanings and opens up pathways to a word's potential beyond etymology. Eke is a distinct debut and a fresh voice in Singapore poetry.
Rating: ★★★★☆
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Straits Times
13 hours ago
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Straits Times
13 hours ago
- Straits Times
Playwright Haresh Sharma at 60: ‘I love that most Singaporeans will offer unsolicited advice'
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I'm the youngest of four children. By the time I was born, my parents didn't bother taking out the camera. So, there's no obligatory picture of me sitting on the round rattan chair or lying face down on the dining table. I knew I was the cutest child, so it didn't matter. An early photograph of playwright Haresh Sharma and his mother. PHOTO: COURTESY OF HARESH SHARMA What is your core memory of Singapore? I don't think I have one significant core memory of Singapore. Like any relationship, it goes through phases. One of my earliest core memories was of National Day. We lived in Marine Parade, facing the sea, and our neighbour's flat faced the city. So, on National Day, we would run from house to house trying to get the best views of the planes, helicopters and fireworks. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. 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There's no way we're going to walk into a neighbour's house unannounced. Haresh Sharma, resident playwright of The Necessary Stage, and artistic director Alvin Tan at the Marine Parade Community Complex. PHOTO: ST FILE What do you consider your biggest contribution to Singapore? The fact that I have written 130 plays over the past 36 years. Every play represents a kind of time capsule, capturing moments and aspects of Singapore life and characters. There were so many stories in the past that weren't written about, and many more in the present that need to be represented in our plays. These creative and dramatic expressions tell the stories of a Singapore we might otherwise not get to see or know about. That and my play Off Centre being the first Singapore play to be selected as a GCE O- and N-level text. Ebi Shankara (left) and Siti Khalijah Zainal in the revival of Off Centre by Haresh Sharma. It became the first Singaporean play to be offered as a GCE O- and N-level literature text. PHOTO: TUCKYS PHOTOGRAPHY What do you love and hate about the country? I love that most Singaporeans will offer unsolicited advice about housing, Central Provident Fund and investments, as well as medical care, especially TCM (traditional Chinese medicine) doctors. I love that the HDB lift is a travelling box of prying questions such as 'you from where?', 'how long you stay here?' and 'you not working today?'. I hate that no public place is safe from people cutting their nails. What is one thing you miss about the Singapore of your childhood? I don't know if it's the Singapore I miss or my childhood, but back then, a treat was a big deal – having a popsicle or eating out or even going to Orchard Road. The Singapore of the 1970s was a time of transition, where we could still play with firecrackers, take a trishaw to school and wait for the epok-epok seller to come to your floor. What is the best and worst thing about being 60? Is there a best thing? Please let me know! A poster for the play Gemuk Girls, written by Haresh Sharma. PHOTO: THE NECESSARY STAGE SG60's theme is Building Our Singapore Together. What would you like the Singapore of the future to look like? Hey, future Singapore! Please be kinder. Don't be so judgmental as if you've got it all together. No one's perfect. Let people be. Be who they want to be. Say what they want to say. Stop being such a control freak! Let it go. Unclench your jaw, Singapore. Nobody needs to COUNT. ON. YOU. Just breathe. And stop with the building! You don't need to prove anything to anyone. Be your authentic self. Take a self-care day, or decade. And what does your next era look like? I'm still in my BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement) era. I'm boycotting brands and divesting from the Empire. It's the era of standing up for what is right, of calling out war crimes and genocide. Next, I might go into my decolonial era. I want to free myself from the shackles of imperialist power structures. 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