Tunku Halim
Tunku Halim (born 1964) is a Malaysian novelist, non-fiction writer, academic and lawyer.
Fiction Writing
The author's fiction primarily falls within the dark fantasy and horror genre. His novel Vermillion Eye was a study text at the National University of Singapore.[1] By delving into Malay myth, legends and folklore his writing is regarded as "World Gothic".[2] His novel, Last Breath, is seen as taking a step away from the genre into "a mixture of character drama, satire, alternate history and magic realism". [3] His latest novel, A Malaysian Restaurant in London, is more conventional, being a paranormal love story. His collection of tales, Horror Stories, is a significant best-selling book in Malaysia
Non-fiction Writing
The author's recent works focus on Malaysian history for children. This includes History of Malaysia, A Children's Encyclopedia and A Children's History of Malaysia. He has also written two books on real estate in Malaysia including Condominiums - Purchase, Investment and Habitat.
Education
Tunku Halim qualified as a Barrister in the United Kingdom after having obtained his Law degree He has been called to the Bar in the High Court of Malaya and as a solicitor in New South Wales. He holds a Master of Science degree in Shipping, Trade and Finance (Distinction) from the City University Business School in London.
Career
He practised corporate and conveyancing law at Shearn Delamore in Kuala Lumpur before working for Merit Management Sdn Bhd, the property developer responsible for Tiara Damansara in section 17, Petaling Jaya. He later moved to Sydney and took up a position as Legal Counsel to Oracle Corporation Australia. After a decade in Sydney, he relocated to Hobart, Tasmania, where he self-published his encyclopedia. He is currently no longer a resident of Australia. His mid-career restrospective collection of short stories aptly entitled Horror Stories became "the best-selling Malaysian English fiction book of all time".
Bibliography
Short Story Collections
- The Rape of Martha Teoh & Other Chilling Stories (1997)
- BloodHaze: 15 Chilling Tales (1999)
- The Woman Who Grew Horns and Other Works (2001)
- 44 Cemetery Road (2007)
- Gravedigger's Kiss (2007)
- 7 Days to Midnight (2013)
- Horror Stories (2014)
- Horror Stories 2 (2016)
Short Stories in Multiple-Author Anthologies
- "Hawker Man" (2007, Dark City 2, ed. Xeus)
- "Keramat" (2008, Exotic Gothic 2, ed. Danel Olson)
- "Biggest Baddest Bomoh" (2009, The Apex Book of World SF, ed Lavie Tidhar)
- "In the Village of Setang" (2012, Exotic Gothic 4, ed. Danel Olson)
- "Quatre Numéros Pour Eric Kwok" French translation of "Four Numbers for Eric Kwok" (2016, Jentayu - revue littéraire d'Asie, tr. Brigitte Bresson, ed. Jérôme Boucaud)
- "Man on the 22nd Floor" (2016, Little Basket 2016, ed. Catalina Rembuyan, Lee Ee Leen, Ted Mahsun, Tshiung Han See)
Novels
- Dark Demon Rising (1997)
- Vermillion Eye (2000)
- Juriah's Song (2008)
- Last Breath (2014)
- A Malaysian Restaurant in London (2015)
Essays in Non-Fiction Anthologies
- "Fiction Writing in the Malay World and the Urban Society" (1999, Commentary: The National University of Singapore Society)
- "Margaret Livesey's Eva Moves the Furniture: Shifting the House of Gothic" (2010, 21st Century Gothic: Great Gothic Novels since 2000, ed. Danel Olson)
Non-Fiction
- Everything the Condominium Developer Should Have Told You But Didn't (1992)
- Condominiums: Purchase Investment & Habitat (1996)
- Tunku Abdullah – A Passion for Life (1998)
- The New Golf Paradigm with Kris Barkway (2001)
- A Children's History of Malaysia (2003)
- History of Malaysia – A Children's Encyclopedia (2009)
- History of Malaysia – A Children's Encyclopedia (2nd Edition) (2013)
- So Fat Lah! - 30 Ways to a Slimmer You (2016)
References
- ↑ Phillips, John. "Torn Pieces: A New Aesthetics of Trash" in Post Modern Singapore (Lim, William). Select Publishing Pte Ltd, 2002, p. 28.
- ↑ Byron, Glennis. "Where Meaning Collapses" in Asian Gothic (Ng, Andrew). McFarland and Company, 2008, p. 32.
- ↑ Toh, Terence. "Into the Valley of Death" in Star 2, 3 April 2015, p. 16