Wednesday 12 September 2012

Uncles, Royalty And Mooncakes

I realise that I haven't written for a little while in this blog but this is mainly due to the fact that I have been writing and publishing elsewhere.

To be totally accurate the publishing took place first.  I was impressed with a coffee table book produced by a good New Zealand friend and decided to follow suit.  His was a book of Sicilian travel adventures and mine, a book of my digital art (click on the book preview below to see the result).

an art portfolio
By roger smith

Both of us used the Blurb platform and my own copy of the book should arrive in the mail in a weeks time.  One own and at least one to go!  I decided also to produce a book based on my life in Singapore and using the contents of this blog as its source.  The problem of course is what to leave out and how to craft it?  Do I use a narrative tone of voice or concentrate on the anecdotal?   The answer is that it will probably be a combination of the the two.

At least I have the title firmly fixed;  "A Man Called Uncle".  Those of you who live in Singapore will be aware of the honorific.  Just writing the book and reviewing four years of blog entries brings back many memories, as do the various photographs I took with my camera and mobile phone.

A quick glance at the Singapore news shows that NUS has risen up the rankings once again.  It is now 25th overall and second best in Asia after the University of Hong Kong, which is in 23rd place.  Good news for Singapore's leading university and for education in the country as a whole.  The investment in academic gravitas seems to be paying off.  I hope my former colleagues in Alumni house are benefiting from the positive publicity.

The Vanda William Catherine
Of course much of today's news focuses on the visit of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge (William and Kate).  They apparently dined on roasted duck, chicken consomme and sliced baked mooncakes - lucky them!  I wouldn't mind betting that the mooncakes were a cut above the ones that I have been consuming; mine were made in Macau and come in the usual embossed tin with auspicious colouring on the lid.

The fact that the Duchess chose to wear a dress created by Singaporean-born designer Prabul Gurung would have gone down as well as the aforementioned mooncakes.

It is also customary for high profile dignitaries to have an orchid named after them. The royal couple gave their name to Vanda William Catherine, a free-flowering orchid hybrid that is white and purple in colour. They also viewed a hybrid variety that bears the name of William's mother and which she never got to see - Dendrobium Memoria Princess Diana.

What I can never quite reconcile is the enduring passion for British Royalty in country that shook off the yoke of British colonialism decades ago.  But as Lilian Tiru in this video explains, many of the older Singaporeans were brought up in the colonial period studied under the British system.


The couple are staying at Raffles Hotel.  I hope they enjoy the curry there as much as I did but I suspect they will be dining on better fare, not doubt with a few local delicacies thrown in.
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