Khmer new wave
Stefanie Sellon
The golden age of Cambodian architecture
The golden age of Cambodian architecture
For McCallum, it wasn’t enough just to write about the environment
Dr Siri meets solemn and dogmatic cadres in Laos
My father’s improvised experiments with Vietnamese cuisine were declared a success
Thant Myint-U writes “with an eye to what the past might say about the present”
Khmer dance was once seen as purely decorative
Because time is a loose concept in Laos, sometimes an hour or two of dinner would pass before any stories recommenced.
The passing of Thailand’s revered king has unleashed a torrent of eulogies.
When Kem Ley’s murderer was asked for his name, he offered a chilling sobriquet: Meet Kill.
Vietnam lies at the wrong end of the Mekong River.
Vietnamese-American literature fulfills the function of ethnic writing
You Need to Apologise to the People is in Burmese, written by a Burmese, about Burmese people
The soul of Yangon reposes in buildings built by British, Indian and Chinese settler-traders
Benedict Anderson left a prodigious legacy for Southeast Asian studies
I would forever remember Dan’s silence. Silently loving me. Silent before my family’s insults and dissuasion.
It will take fifty years to restore the marine ecosystem of Vietnam’s central coast
William J. Rust sheds new light on postwar Cambodia
A new generation of Cambodian writers are given voice in English in Modern Literature of Cambodia
The sixty-ninth Cannes Film Festival premiered Cambodian director Davy Chou’s first feature film, Diamond Island.
‘”I survived the Khmer Rouge, I survived the Soviet Union, and I survived cancer,” says Cambodian composer Him Sophy
Intrigue, mystery, subterfuge, robbery and murder — think an exotic fish
A trip down the Mekong River becomes surreal
The long-awaited Heng Samrin autobiography
Viet Thanh Nguyen tests the limits of fiction
The enigma of Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej
The éminence grise of the Cambodian genocide
Who needs friends when a whole country is in love with you?
The legacy of Vietnam’s doi moi
Magical realism meets gritty realism
The latest in verse from around the Mekong region
At S-21, Duch was responsible for the torture and death of some 14,000 people
Personal patronage keeps the Cambodian arts alive
Dengue fever may become one of this century’s most devastating pandemics
The Mekong is threatened by upstream hydroelectric dam projects
One sport has played a surprising role in defining Laos and the Lao — tikhi
The undefinable, addictive nature of Vietnamese food
Established in Chiang Mai in 1989, publisher Silkworm now boasts more than 200 titles
Only Lonely Planet can get you “off the beaten path”, onto “the road less travelled”
Myanmar fell apart as soon as it became independent
The life and work of Marguerite Duras