Literature

Filipino and Filipino American writers turn the city of Manila itself into the iconic noir character, the "femme fatale."
"Nothing much has changed," the groundbreaking author and editor says of Asian Americans in the arts, "the barriers are still there."
The contemporary novelist says she's attracted to myths and epics "because they are timeless."
Japanese and American poets, novelists, and essayists explore the challenges and rewards of contemporary literature in translation.
Author Paul French, whose Midnight in Peking was awarded the 2013 Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime, visited Asia Society Studios to offer advice for aspiring authors hoping to write the next great China book.
The third issue of the acclaimed Japanese/American literary journal is the most cosmopolitan yet.
A cautionary tale of 19th-century imperial hubris that still resonates today.
Janice Pariat's short stories dismantle stereotypical notions of India's Northeast as an ethereal place untouched by time and modernity.
A successful two-day event in Pakistan's cultural capital leads to speculation that literary festivals just might be the country's "new soft power."
A literature festival becomes a political statement in a city where bomb blasts, like thunderstorms, have become part of the natural order.
Introducing new novel at the Karachi Literature Festival, one of Pakistan's leading younger writers says, "You have to find new ways of telling stories."