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Book Cover for: Snow at 5 PM: Translations of an Insignificant Japanese Poet, Jee Leong Koh

Snow at 5 PM: Translations of an Insignificant Japanese Poet

Jee Leong Koh

Winner of the Singapore Literature Prize for Fiction 2022

Necessary Fiction's Recommended Reading 2020


The rescue of a literary manuscript results in a war of words over the interpretation of 107 haiku about New York's Central Park. In the battle of commentaries, what is at stake is nothing less than the meaning of America in an imaginary but highly plausible future. Reenvisioning Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire for a technologized age, Snow at 5 PM discovers revolutionary uses, and abuses, for literature and history.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Gaudy Boy, LLC
  • Publish Date: Sep 1st, 2020
  • Pages: 402
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.50in - 5.50in - 0.89in - 1.12lb
  • EAN: 9780999451410
  • Categories: LiteraryAsian American & Pacific Islander

About the Author

Koh, Jee Leong: - Jee Leong Koh is the author of Steep Tea (Carcanet), named as one of the best books of 2015 by UK's Financial Times and a finalist in the Lambda Literary Awards in the US. He has published four other books of poetry, a volume of essays, and a collection of zuihitsu. His work has been translated into Japanese, Chinese, Malay, Vietnamese, Russian, and Latvian. Originally from Singapore, he lives in New York, where he heads the literary nonprofit Singapore Unbound and the indie press Gaudy Boy.

More books by Jee Leong Koh

Book Cover for: Sample and Loop: A Simple History of Singaporeans in America, Jee Leong Koh
Book Cover for: The Pillow Book: English-Japanese Illustrated Edition マクラノソウシ(日本&, Jee Leong Koh
Book Cover for: Payday Loans: Poems, Jee Leong Koh
Book Cover for: Seven Studies for a Self Portrait, Jee Leong Koh
Book Cover for: Equal to the Earth, Jee Leong Koh
Book Cover for: Inspector Inspector, Jee Leong Koh
Book Cover for: Steep Tea, Jee Leong Koh
Book Cover for: Connor & Seal, Jee Leong Koh

Praise for this book

"Jee Leong Koh's Snow at 5 P.M. may be Singapore's first global novel. It is multi-genre, with 107 haiku introducing many of the prose passages. Set chiefly in contemporary Manhattan, with Central Park as the jewel in the setting, the fiction flashes off and on, like red warning signals, to a futuristic climate-changed Singapore Island and planet. The novel is multi-civilisational, the protagonist-narrator being a diasporic Singaporean living in New York City, in quest of his speculative protagonist, a Japanese poet immigrant to the same American territory. The novel is a mash-up of sub-genres. It is a mystery story, puzzling a missing poet known only through the half-burnt sheaves of haiku left in the apartment the narrator has moved into. The fiction is thickened, like Herman Melville's Moby Dick's whaling information, with empirical botanical knowledge that offers a different discursive dimension to the haiku images of flora and fauna. Asian American scholarship and displays of literary erudition are scored with erotic gay intimacies. Multitudinous digressive language plays, sub-characters' lineages and histories, suggest unities in the tradition of Joycean epic works. Snow at 5 p.m.'s hybrid literary traditions, genres and sub-genres, generating complex threads, each digressing and spinning other threads, achieve a tour de force, a globalized Singapore imaginary that dazzles."

-Judges' comments, Singapore Literature Prize 2022


"... deft and sophisticated... something delightful on almost every page."

-Necessary Fiction


"Snow at 5 PM is the first instantiation of a new genre, that of tranxfiction, whose characteristics may be summarized thus: transnational, translational, transgender, and transgressive. The 'x' in the name of the genre encapsulates not only the illicit crossing of boundaries, but also the promiscuous multiplication of signifiers. Such works explode the conventional unities of subjectivity, text, and polis. They are 'oscillating guns' set from the start to go off."

-Angel Jefferson, Theorizing the Sign of the Transgender


"Commentary is an ancient art practiced in many cultures around the world. In this novel work, it is revived and reexamined as a means of understanding modernity and ourselves. What Koh reveals is that we comment as naturally as we breathe, that we exist as artfully as we speak."

-Rabbi Saul Barenboim, the Isaac M. Wise Temple


"Koh's haiku are some of the finest in the English language that I have ever read. The prose commentaries are fun, but the haiku are fantastic."

-De-Jing Dao, The Monkey Sage and Other Poems