Now That It's Over<Winner of the 2015 Epigram Books Fiction Prize> During the Christmas holidays in 2004, an earthquake in the Indian Ocean triggers a tsunami that devastates fourteen countries. Two couples from Singapore are vacationing in Phuket when the tsunami strikes. Alternating between the aftermath of the catastrophe and past events that led these characters to that fateful moment, Now That It’s Over weaves a tapestry of causality and regret, and chronicles the physical and emotional wreckage wrought by natural and manmade disasters. |
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... author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. FIRST EDITION: June 2016 For my parents “All water has a perfect memory and.
... author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. FIRST EDITION: June 2016 For my parents “All water has a perfect memory and.
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O Thiam Chin. “All water has a perfect memory and is forever trying to get back to where it was.” —TONI MORRISON “The heart is but the beach beside the sea that is the world.” —CHINESE PROVERB PART ONE 1 AI LING The body lies on the.
O Thiam Chin. “All water has a perfect memory and is forever trying to get back to where it was.” —TONI MORRISON “The heart is but the beach beside the sea that is the world.” —CHINESE PROVERB PART ONE 1 AI LING The body lies on the.
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... memory or thought is held at bay. The only thing you can feel is a debilitating heaviness, seeping into every part of you—it is a deeply familiar sensation, from a time long ago. A distant memory surfaces: the death of someone—but whom ...
... memory or thought is held at bay. The only thing you can feel is a debilitating heaviness, seeping into every part of you—it is a deeply familiar sensation, from a time long ago. A distant memory surfaces: the death of someone—but whom ...
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... memory that keeps looping through my mind. I was lying on the beach after a long tussle with the sea. I could feel the gritty texture of wet sand on my face; my lips were crusted with salt, and a residual metallic taste lingered in my ...
... memory that keeps looping through my mind. I was lying on the beach after a long tussle with the sea. I could feel the gritty texture of wet sand on my face; my lips were crusted with salt, and a residual metallic taste lingered in my ...
Contents
Section 19 | |
Section 20 | |
Section 21 | |
Section 22 | |
Section 23 | |
Section 24 | |
Section 25 | |
Section 26 | |
Section 9 | |
Section 10 | |
Section 11 | |
Section 12 | |
Section 13 | |
Section 14 | |
Section 15 | |
Section 16 | |
Section 17 | |
Section 18 | |
Section 27 | |
Section 28 | |
Section 29 | |
Section 30 | |
Section 31 | |
Section 32 | |
Section 33 | |
Section 34 | |
Section 35 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Andaman Sea arms asked aunt aunt’s Bangkok beach beside body Boon’s bottle boy’s breaking breath catch Chee Seng close Cody Cody’s dark dead boy dinner disappeared door dream drink everything eyes face father feel feet felt flock of seagulls glanced hair hand he’s head hear hold hotel room inside knew leaving light Ling Ling’s longtail boats looked marriage memory mind mobile phone morning mother mouth move never night okay Old Master Q old woman parents Patong Phuket pull restaurant ring sand seagull Seng’s sense shirt shophouse shoulder shower silence Singapore sitting skin sleep slipped smell smile someone sound stall standing stare stay step stop street stretch talk tell there’s things thoughts toilet told took trying turned voice waiting walk watch waves Wee Boon Wei Xiang What’s woman’s you’re