Essay sample library > Corridor : 12 short stories / by Alfian Sa'at

Corridor : 12 short stories / by Alfian Sa'at

2023-08-15 02:31:53

Corridor is a series of short stories in Singapore today. Alfian Sa'at wrote the inhabitants of HDB with ruthless clarity and sorrowful sincerity. Life begins to collapse. The characters of each story will find themselves at the opportunity to give hope and change. The camera changes how the indignant daughter looks at the widow's mother. A couple who was married receives a free holiday ticket when their luck seems to have run out. It depicts a foolish, vivid portrait of modern Singaporeans living along the corridor of the city; lost love, irrevocable childhood, and the desire for freedom

Alfian Bin Sa'at (Singapore, July 18, 1977) is a writer known as Alfian Sa'at, a famous British and Malay playwright, poet and short story writer in Singapore and Malaysia. Alfian, famous for his political work, is the only Singaporean Malay author who produced numerous English works, one of the few local writers who wrote drama, poetry, short stories. He won the Straits Times' Best Screenplay Award three times! Won the 2001 Drama Award, Young Artist Prize

Corridor is a series of short stories in Singapore today. Alfian Sa'at writes HDB residents - students, housewives, factory workers - with ruthless, clear, sincere honesty. Happiness is fragile when you put yourself in a country where they are obsessed with progress and success. Their lives begin to collapse

This is an anthology of Alfian Sa'at and seems to be one of the texts that can be incorporated into the language learner's readers. The theme of these stories is sensitive to age and is suitable for language learners over the age of 16. In general, these stories are really important stories, you will remember the kaleidoscope of characters and experience when people review the series completely; colorful, sometimes strange. Sa'at strives to express people of various ages and backgrounds with various stories rather than focusing on specific people in the story. The results represent part of life, and the idea of ​​"common" Singaporeans disappeared from the book page. The role of Sa'at is not universal He managed to create valuable credibility with them and successfully invite readers to identify them or sympathize themselves.