King of The Sea: Dina Zaman, - Kuala Lumpur: Silverfish Books, 2012. 154 Pp. ISBN 978-983-3221-36-3
King of The Sea: Dina Zaman, - Kuala Lumpur: Silverfish Books, 2012. 154 Pp. ISBN 978-983-3221-36-3
The volume of nine stories, King of the Sea, written by Dina Zaman and
published by Raman Krishnan’s Silverfish Books, might well have been
renamed Kampong Trysts – Eros and Thanatos, for their acute predilection for
voyeurism and death.
Dina Zaman is a well-respected writer within her home country –
Malaysia. Ms Zaman has been variously, a journalist, an editor, a blogger and a
lady with a keen social conscience. She broke new ground (for Malaysia) when,
in 2007, she wrote, collated and edited her I Am Muslim collection of inquiries
(previously published in www.malaysiakini.com, from January 2005 to August
2006). In that book she attempted to reveal the diversity of Muslim thought and
practice within the states of Malaysia and, to a large extent, succeeded. A second
volume was planned, but never materialised. It was to be a book of promise
which, ultimately, was never fulfilled. Prior to I Am Muslim, in 1997, Ms Zaman
had produced a booklet of short stories entitled Night and Day.
Ms Zaman is an Asian Public Intellectual (Senior Fellow), and is regularly
published in newspapers (online and off) and, occasionally, from out Silverfish
Books, at Bangsar, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. She re-enters the book market with
her slight volume of short stories (154 pages) King of the Sea. The length of the
book, the (mostly) gray cover, and the few stories therein lend the book a slight
inconsequential air.
King of the Sea is a collection relating rudimentary tales of Malays,
kampongs and intimations of life (as lived?) within the rural expanses which
cover the majority of previously jungle-clad Malaysia. For this series of titbits
(rather than a full meal) Ms Zaman has evidently drawn from her not
inconsiderable experience of those far from idyllic Malaysian rustic areas, and
reveals for her audience intimations of lewdness and libidinousness signposting
concupiscence within Malaysia’s kampongs. Perhaps some revelations are family
recollections. Maybe those recollections are coupled with observances gleaned
from such rustic and pastoral environments as the mythologised kampong
which Malays frequently return to on high days and holidays (Balik Kampung).
Whichever the source, there seems little doubt that a heavy amount of Jean Paul
Sartre’s retrospective illusion has coloured the “golden age” in which these tales
take place. Could this be Ms Zaman’s wishful thinking or a raunchier déjà vu
reminiscent of the film maker Yasmin Ahmad’s rose-tinted advertisements and
filmic out-pourings?
This fresh volume from Ms Zaman is, perhaps, not quite as brand
sparkling new as it may seem. For many, if not all, of the stories contained in
Martin Bradley
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia