The Last Lesson of Mrs de Souza
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
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Look inside the book
Get the E-book   Listen to the audiobookOne last time and on her birthday, Rose de Souza is returning to school to give a final lesson to her classroom of secondary school boys before retiring from her long teaching career. What ensues is an unexpected confession in which she recounts the tragic and traumatic story of Amir, a student from her past who overturned the way she saw herself as a teacher, and changed her life forever. The stunning first novel from award-winning poet Cyril Wong, The Last Lesson of Mrs de Souza is a tour de force, an exceptional examination of the power of choice and the unreliability of memory.Â
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âThe novel calls for a change in the ways we think of freedom, individual merit, feelings, emotional relationships, and above all, personal identity. It also questions the devastating importance given to economic success and global relevance in contemporary times, and by such questioning, implies the need for a sincere peek at what makes human beings a cohesive warm-hearted community.â
âUma Jayaraman, AsiaticâCyril Wong is proving himself to be a prose stylist of a calibre that threatens to outdo his poetry, with words so poignant and heartfelt, and a narrative drive thatâs often direct and bold yet breathtaking in its fragile beauty.â
âGerrie Lim, author of Inside the OutsiderâWong pulls the rug from under us but leaves us still standing, albeit transportedâŠto a new vantage point and offered a different perspective.â
âDr K. K. SeetÂâWong writes profoundlyâŠon what he senses as being the real challenge for most of usâŠto make meanings of our discontinuous worlds.â
âKirpal Singh, Kunapipi: Journal of Postcolonial Writing & CultureÂâCyrilâŠsculpts a space for the reader to think, baffle over and be elated.â
âThe Business TimesÂâ[A] talented writer who can write whatever he wants, with daring and originality.â
âO Thiam Chin, The Jakarta PostÂâWong tries to provoke a different perspective on life, tackling how people accept its so-called truths and established principles.â
âTODAYÂâA truly soul-searching read.â
âPOPCLUBÂâI couldnât help but feel an Ishiguro-vibe throughout... A solid novelistic debut from Wong.â
âStephen Sohn, Asian American Literature FansÂâWhat a haunting novel this is... I've read nothing quite like it honestly... Every Singaporean should read this.â
âRachelâs Book Reviews -
Cyril Wong is the Singapore Literature Prize-winning author of poetry collections such as Unmarked Treasure, Tilting Our Plates to Catch the Light and Satori Blues, as well as a collection of strange short fables called Let Me Tell You Something About That Night. He has served as a mentor under the Creative Arts Programme and the Mentor Access Project, as well as a judge for the Golden Point Awards in Singapore.
A past recipient of the National Arts Councilâs Young Artist Award for Literature, he completed his doctoral degree in English Literature at the National University of Singapore in 2012. His books include poetry collections Tilting Our Plates to Catch the Light (2007) and The Loverâs Inventory (2015), the novel The Last Lesson of Mrs de Souza (2013) and short fiction collection Ten Things My Father Never Taught Me (2014).

Description
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
-
Look inside the book
Get the E-book   Listen to the audiobookOne last time and on her birthday, Rose de Souza is returning to school to give a final lesson to her classroom of secondary school boys before retiring from her long teaching career. What ensues is an unexpected confession in which she recounts the tragic and traumatic story of Amir, a student from her past who overturned the way she saw herself as a teacher, and changed her life forever. The stunning first novel from award-winning poet Cyril Wong, The Last Lesson of Mrs de Souza is a tour de force, an exceptional examination of the power of choice and the unreliability of memory.Â
-
âThe novel calls for a change in the ways we think of freedom, individual merit, feelings, emotional relationships, and above all, personal identity. It also questions the devastating importance given to economic success and global relevance in contemporary times, and by such questioning, implies the need for a sincere peek at what makes human beings a cohesive warm-hearted community.â
âUma Jayaraman, AsiaticâCyril Wong is proving himself to be a prose stylist of a calibre that threatens to outdo his poetry, with words so poignant and heartfelt, and a narrative drive thatâs often direct and bold yet breathtaking in its fragile beauty.â
âGerrie Lim, author of Inside the OutsiderâWong pulls the rug from under us but leaves us still standing, albeit transportedâŠto a new vantage point and offered a different perspective.â
âDr K. K. SeetÂâWong writes profoundlyâŠon what he senses as being the real challenge for most of usâŠto make meanings of our discontinuous worlds.â
âKirpal Singh, Kunapipi: Journal of Postcolonial Writing & CultureÂâCyrilâŠsculpts a space for the reader to think, baffle over and be elated.â
âThe Business TimesÂâ[A] talented writer who can write whatever he wants, with daring and originality.â
âO Thiam Chin, The Jakarta PostÂâWong tries to provoke a different perspective on life, tackling how people accept its so-called truths and established principles.â
âTODAYÂâA truly soul-searching read.â
âPOPCLUBÂâI couldnât help but feel an Ishiguro-vibe throughout... A solid novelistic debut from Wong.â
âStephen Sohn, Asian American Literature FansÂâWhat a haunting novel this is... I've read nothing quite like it honestly... Every Singaporean should read this.â
âRachelâs Book Reviews -
Cyril Wong is the Singapore Literature Prize-winning author of poetry collections such as Unmarked Treasure, Tilting Our Plates to Catch the Light and Satori Blues, as well as a collection of strange short fables called Let Me Tell You Something About That Night. He has served as a mentor under the Creative Arts Programme and the Mentor Access Project, as well as a judge for the Golden Point Awards in Singapore.
A past recipient of the National Arts Councilâs Young Artist Award for Literature, he completed his doctoral degree in English Literature at the National University of Singapore in 2012. His books include poetry collections Tilting Our Plates to Catch the Light (2007) and The Loverâs Inventory (2015), the novel The Last Lesson of Mrs de Souza (2013) and short fiction collection Ten Things My Father Never Taught Me (2014).











