Publish with us

Connect with us

New Books Releasing In December 2024

As we countdown to the end of 2024, there’s still time to hit your reading goals—and what better way to do it than with some exciting new releases! Whether you’re looking to complete your year-end reading challenge or get a head start on your 2025 goals, we’ve got five fresh and thought-provoking books to add to your list this month.

Here are the must-read books hitting the shelves this month:


Know more||

Step into the world of Fatimah Busu through this captivating collection of ten short stories. Spanning several decades—from the 1960s to the 1990s—this anthology blends social realism, magic realism, dreamscapes, and mythology. Fatimah’s evocative storytelling explores the complexities of women’s lives and the societies they navigate, offering a rich tapestry of themes for readers to explore. A must-read for fans of literary fiction with a unique cultural twist!

 

Know more||

In her debut novel, Suzanne Scott Tomita introduces a powerful narrative about class division, childhood friendships, and the eroding bonds that shape our lives. Until Even the Angels delves into the deep emotional landscapes of its characters, exploring how past relationships shape present realities. When successful London real estate agent, Isabelle Goh, is left close to death in an attempted assassination, Detective Ayesha Nur begins a case that not only brings her face to face with her own demons. What happened a half-century ago in post-colonial Singapore?

Know more||

In an era of constant change, Jerome Mangadap introduces a revolutionary framework for leadership with B.E.S.T. Marking. This book is more than just a guide—it’s a call to action for leaders to face the challenges of today’s world and come out on top. Packed with fresh insights and actionable tools, this book is essential for anyone looking to lead organizations toward success in a rapidly evolving landscape.

Know more||

Friska Wirya—a multiple award-winning author—dives deep into case studies from across Asia, offering a roadmap for how to adapt change management strategies to different cultural contexts. The Future Fit Asian Organization explores real-world challenges and provides insights on how to harmonize leadership practices with the diverse cultures of Asia. This book is perfect for business leaders and managers seeking to enhance their organizational strategies across the region.

Know more||

In the age of digital transformation, Phanish Puranam’s Re-Humanize presents a compelling vision for balancing organizational goals with human-centric values. This book explores how companies can embrace technology while fostering community, connection, and purpose. A must-read for leaders looking to build organizations that are both goal-driven and people-first.

 

Which book will you dive into first?

With so many exciting new releases, there’s no shortage of inspiration for your next great read. Whether you’re closing out the year or gearing up for 2025, these books will spark your imagination and broaden your horizons.

Stay tuned to our Instagram page for updates on release dates and more exciting book recommendations!

Happy reading, pals!

Read an exclusive excerpt from The Gumption of Mr Toilet

Imagine a world without toilets! 

Sounds crazy, right? Yet, billions of people still don’t have access to safe sanitation. On World Toilet Day, we’re not just celebrating toilets—we’re fighting for dignity, health, and equal rights for everyone. And behind this global movement is a man who’s literally changed the world with his vision: Jack Sim, aka Mr. Toilet. 

From a poor kid who failed at school to a global game-changer, Jack Sim used one simple thing, gumption, to spark a revolution. Check out this powerful excerpt from his book, The Gumption of Mr Toilet where he breaks down exactly how he made toilets—and a whole lot more—matter.

 


Since the founding of the UN on 24 October 1945, the first UN Water Conference was held in 1977, and the second one was in 2023. It’s appalling to see an important agenda such as Water be made a low priority. But if you think Water has been neglected, you should know that Sanitation is even more neglected. That 2023 UN Water Conference devoted only about 5 per cent of the sessions to Sanitation and Hygiene and less than 1 per cent to Menstrual Health, which is a big taboo as well. We live in a world where agendas are addressed according to their charisma. Corporations love green and blue agendas like Environment, where they can use trees, rivers, coral reefs, pandas, and polar bears in their publicity material. They avoid ‘Brown Agendas’ like Poop, Diarrhoea, Polluted Rivers, which are equally important.

Therefore, in order to succeed, we have to make sanitation sexy, and we have a secret weapon. Since it is a taboo and has been unspoken for such a long time, it has news potential. We created new narratives that helped the media attract massive readerships and advertising income, and the global media took our stories by storm. As we take charge of the narratives, we command the attention of the world.

The World Toilet Organization was founded on 19 November 2001. Our founding day has since been adopted unanimously by all 193 countries of the UN General Assembly as the official UN World Toilet Day. We broke the taboo on the Sanitation Agenda. In 2010, the blockbuster film Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows was launched globally and was trending at the fourth position on Twitter (now called X) on 19 November, while World Toilet Day ranked fifth. But Harry Potter invested multimillion dollars in publicity while we did it at zero cost. We saw Justin Bieber was trending at the sixth position and catching up with us. So, we tweeted that ‘Justin Bieber is doing worse than Shit’. This single tweet sparked a furore of attacks by Justin Bieber’s fans, and it boosted our visibility causing us to trend even higher. Suddenly, a lot more people learned about the existence of World Toilet Day.

This is how guerrilla marketing works. We leverage anything and everything, making the irrelevant become relevant to our mission. There is no such thing as bad publicity with an agenda like Sanitation, which is a taboo itself.

I created the World Toilet Organization with the WTO acronym to play a pun on the World Trade Organization. I was hoping that the WTO would sue me, then I’d be famous. It turns out that they didn’t sue me, but we became known as the other WTO forever. Nothing sells like contraband. Either way, I won. Eventually, the journalists started calling me Mr Toilet and that moniker created another intellectual property for us with highly sticky brand equity. The most elegant thing is we achieved all this without paying a cent for media publicity and have never paid marketing dollar in the last twenty-four years. When you have no money, work around it.

The Gandhians said: ‘First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.’

Ten years later, I met Pascal Lamy, the Director-General of the World Trade Organization at the World Economic Forum in 2011 in Jakarta. I introduced myself and he exclaimed with some jest: ‘Oh, I know you. Yours is the more important WTO!’

_________________________________________________________________

From toilets to global sanitation, Jack’s journey is a testament to the power of vision, grit, and gumption—that unstoppable drive to turn an idea into reality.  On World Toilet Day, let’s remember that every small action counts. 

P.S. You can win a copy of the book and a special tote bag. Head to our Instagram now. 

 

Read an exclusive excerpt from Saving the Planet

Saving the Planet is a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the intersections between politics and climate change, as well as for an authentic voice at the frontlines of climate action in the Global South. Read an expert from the chapter Livable Cities below.  

*** 

San Francisco has contributed much to music. Metallica, Santana, and the Grateful Dead are just a few of the bands that are from or were based in the city. In fact, journalist Herb Caen called the city ‘Baghdad by the Bay’ due to its diversity and cultural significance. But when talking about the birdsongs there, a curious observation was made. Since 1969, the songs of the white-crowned sparrows in San Francisco have been recorded for study. Similar to human beings, birds have ‘dialects’—there is a geographical variation in birdsongs, and they evolve over time. How fast or slowly this happens depends on various factors. The frequency of the songs has increased over time, possibly adapting to the city’s increased noise pollution. While dialects in the city’s bushy countryside disappeared, the dialect that developed in the city not only survived but became dominant, replacing the disappearing dialects of the countryside. 

Throughout history, the impact of cities on humans has been clear. We are only now, however, realizing the impact of cities on animals, plants, and the environment. While climate change caused by carbon emissions is a relatively recent phenomenon, air pollution is a problem that predates the Industrial Revolution. Workshops and furnaces produced dirty and unhealthy air. The Greek physician, Hippocrates, advised travelling physicians to look at the cleanliness of a city’s air and water. The use of fire from biomass for cooking, heating, and protection against mosquitoes led to lung diseases, which was recorded by various Roman scholars from over 2,000 years ago, as early as the dawn of the Common Era. At the same time, cases were heard in Roman courts about disputes over air pollution. 

About a thousand years after the birth of Hippocrates, Prophet Muhammad was born in Mecca. At that time, the city was thriving with trade, attracting merchants from across Arabia and the Levant. Mecca was also already a city of pilgrimage, sustained by the Zamzam well. Yet, the infant Prophet was sent to the desert to be cared for by Halimah, a wet nurse. This was an Arab custom at that time to not only allow the young to learn the classical Arab tongue of the Bedouins but also enjoy the cleaner desert air outside the city. 

*** 

Saving the Planet relates author Nik Nazmi’s experiences as NRECC Minister [later redesignated as the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability (NRES)] and his thoughts on connected issues ranging from water management to climate financing. Get your copy to read his fascinating insights.  

 

Read an exclusive excerpt from Sarah Silvestre’s Travel Blog

Sarah goes on a quest for seven waterfalls all over Philippines- from Tanay, Rizal all the way to Lake Sebu, South Cotabato. She documents her adventure in her journal which she then turns into a travel blog called Sarah, the Seeker. 

We are sharing exclusive snippets from her blog updates.  

*** 

Captivating Kawasan Falls, Cebu  

Amid the verdant canopies of Cebu, where the sun plays hide and seek with the leaves, lies a spectacle of nature’s artistry—Kawasan Falls. The journey to its basin is as much a part of the experience as the destination itself, with each step through the winding paths and each breath of the moist, earthy air heightening the sense of anticipation. 

As I followed the trail, I could hear the distant sound of rushing water filling me with excitement. The sound grew to a crescendo, from a quiet murmur to a powerful roar, a clear call that I was nearing the heart of the falls. The air grew cooler, the mist more pronounced, and then, suddenly, the canopy parted to reveal the majestic cascade of Kawasan Falls.  

The water was an astonishing shade of blue, reminiscent of a gemstone freshly unearthed. It cascaded down rocky tiers, each layer a different note in the harmonic masterpiece of the landscape. Each drop that hit the water’s surface sent ripples that danced in the sunlight like liquid crystals.  

The main pool is a natural amphitheatre, with water crashing down into it from the cliffs above, sending up plumes of spray that catch the light like diamonds against a sunbeam. To stand in the basin of Kawasan Falls is to stand in the midst of a perpetual rainbow. The spray creates a fine mist that surrounds you, and as the sunlight filters through, the colours of the spectrum come alive.  

I dipped my toe in, and the chill of the water sent a tingling sensation up my spine. The atmosphere was tranquil, only punctuated by the music of nature—the rustling leaves, chirping birds, and the constant hum of the waterfall. The latter is all-encompassing, a sound that reverberates through your body and insists on a moment of reverence.  

Even the air had a unique character. It was thick with moisture but also refreshingly cool. Each breath I took felt cleansing, like inhaling the essence of the Earth itself. 

The water was so inviting, cool, and refreshing against the skin, a welcome respite from the heat. Swimming in the pool beneath the falls, you’re at the mercy of the current, pulled into the rhythm of the water. It was a powerful reminder of nature’s gentle strength and untamed beauty.  

As I left Kawasan Falls, the sensation of water droplets on my skin evaporated, but the imprint of the experience stayed with me. It was a reminder that sometimes the most beautiful places on earth require a journey, physical and spiritual, to truly understand their magnificence.  

And, of course, let’s not forget the local flavours. I thoroughly enjoyed my little picnic of lechon, pusô, and Coke. The lechon itself will be the topic of a totally different blog on its own. After that, sipping fresh coconut juice from a husk, the nutty sweetness perfectly complemented the sensory spectacle of Kawasan Falls. 

So, why I did I go to Kawasan Falls in the first place? It’s all thanks to @MaverickMarley [Check out her awesome blog here]. A month ago, I would never have dreamed of setting foot in these falls. My baby brother introduced me to Marley, hoping to cheer me up after a couple of setbacks (in life and in love). At first, I thought I just wanted to get moving, get fit. But it became more than that. After I visited Batlag Falls in Rizal and successfully completed my first river trail ride with her to Kinabuan Falls (also in Rizal), I was obsessed. There’s just nothing like the exhilaration of finding a waterfall. It’s never an easy hike. You have to go down a trail and go up again. But it doesn’t matter. Just being in a waterfall basin is the best feeling in the world.  

After Batlag and Kinabuan, I asked myself, ‘What if I visited five more waterfalls?’ Everyone said I was crazy. 

But here I am. 

I hope you, dear readers, can one day experience this wonder for yourselves. Until then, let’s keep seeking the extraordinary in the ordinary world.  

Happy travels,  

Sarah, the Seeker 

*** 

Read more about her adventure in Steady Sarah. Available online and at bookstores.  

 

 

New Reads for November

As 2024 wraps up, it’s the perfect moment to grab some fresh reads and crush those reading goals. This month, we’ve got an awesome lineup that spans genres and vibes—perfect for cozy nights in or whenever you need a good escape.

Whether you’re looking for self-help that actually gets you, thrilling mysteries that keep you guessing, or stories that spark deep thoughts about the world, we’ve got you covered.

Here are the books releasing this month:

 

Know more||

Written and designed by Puty Puar, Self-Improved Me offers a toolkit that doesn’t promise a one-size-fits-all method. It’s about the discovery process itself. With bite-sized writings and illustrations, it aims to help get us to know ourselves better and appreciate our unique way of progressing in life.

 

Buy here||

Written by an award-winning writer Suzanne Kamata, River of Dolls and Other Stories is a collection of short stories, many of which riff on traditional Japanese folk tales and lore and explore the lives of individuals caught between desire and duty, as well as the conflicting expectations of different cultures.

 

Buy here||

Written by Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad, Saving the Planet is a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the intersections between politics and climate change, as well as for an authentic voice at the frontlines of climate action in the Global South. 

 

Know more||

Written by Kantarin Leelahuta, One Night Stand is a thrilling mystery featuring three famous girls who have it all – the looks, the fame, and the boys. The lives of these inseparable friends change as one of them dies, but, who killed her and why?  

Buy here||

Written by Larry Nyanti, A Rei of Sunshine is a coming-of-age tale that weaves together the threads of two former lovers separated by circumstance over many years. However, when their paths meets again, things only get more complicated with a twist of supernatural elements.  

Buy here||

Written by Edmund Terence Gomez, Misgovernance unveils covert and deeply disturbing political-economic trends in Malaysia, necessitating an urgent re-think of the meaning of ‘corruption’. Three major paradoxes emerge from this book’s insights into the inner workings of Malaysia’s monstrously vast GLC ecosystem. 

Buy here||

Written by Earl Valencia and Dan Gonzales, Startup Mindset unveils the secrets of the Silicon Valley ecosystem and guides readers on the mindsets that differentiate the leaders who were trained from the industrial economy of the past from those who have grown and transcended into a digital-first world. 

 

Found a book that instantly spoke to you? Keep an eye out on our Social Media pages to know when they come out.  

Happy reading!