• Reid Mitchell’s new poem “Tiny Pyramids” is now published in the Fall 2009 issue of The Furnace Review. Reid Mitchell is consulting editor of Cha.

  • Alistair Noon’s essay “November Notes (the Fall of the Berlin Wall)” is aptly published in November in L I t T e R. Read it here. Alistair Noon’s poetry and creative non-fiction were published in issue #2 of Cha. His poem “The Expat Partner: An…

  • Bob Bradshaw’s new poem “In China” is now published in Poetry Friends. Read Bob Bradshaw’s Cha profile.

  • Read Arlene Ang’s new work “UNIDENTIFIED DARK OBJECT (WITH SHOELACE)” in the new issue (issue #9.5) of DIAGRAM. Arlene Ang’s poetry has been published in issue #1 of Cha.

  • Bob Bradshaw’s three new poems “Old Li Po”, “So Hong Kong” and “Conducting a Garden” are new published in the newly established Writers Connect. Read the poems here. Read Bob Bradshaw’s Cha profile.

  • The evening will be taking place on Monday 30th November from 6.30pm at Foyles bookshop on Charing Cross Road, and will involve an introduction from the poet Lemn Sissay, following from which Caroline will be reading from her new collection…

  • Cha contributors Lee Yew Leong and Shirley Geok-lin Lim have works published in the October 2009 issue of Quarterly Literary Review Singapore. Read Yew Leong’s story “Gross Domestic Happiness” and article “The Mise En Abyme in Byatt’s The Matisse Stories”…

  • Jee Leong Koh’s new poem “What We Call Vegetables” is published in the sixth issue of Los Angeles Review. You can get a copy of the new issue here. Jee Leong Koh’s poetry was published in issue #6 of Cha.

  • Issue Thirty Four of Concelebratory Shoehorn Review (editor: Maurice Oliver) is now online. Read poetry by Michael Estabrook, Fiona Wright, Gordon Purkis, Rachelle Arlin Credo, Vince Gullaci, Simon Perchik, Anne Lombardo-Ardolino, and Emily Kendal Frey. Also included in this issue…

  • In this new collection of stories, O Thiam Chin has created a series of unforgettable, deeply-affecting portraits of individuals whose intersections of loves and losses mark the dawn of awareness and longing in their lives. Never Been Better illustrates his…