Sunday, February 8, 2026

Q&A with Ian Poh Jin Tze

  


 

 

Ian Poh Jin Tze is the author and photographer of the books The Silent Song of the African Savannah and Behind the Scenes: Lives of These Unsung Heroes

 

Q: What inspired you to create your photobooks The Silent Song of the African Savannah and Behind the Scenes?

 

A: For me, photography has never been an act of preservation—it is an act of invocation. A communion of light and emotion that seeks not merely to document, but to awaken. I am drawn to the spaces between what is seen and what is felt, where stories linger in silence and meaning reveals itself slowly, intimately, to the attentive viewer.

 

Behind the Scenes emerged from a constellation of unanswered questions and half-forgotten myths—urban legends, personal curiosities, quiet observations that coalesced into a journey across continents. For years, I lived in perpetual motion, sustained by immaculate hotel rooms and effortless abundance, failing to see the human constellations that sustained this illusion.

 

When the pandemic grounded me in Malaysia, solitude sharpened into awareness, and I met the family who managed the serviced residence where I stayed. Through them, I witnessed the extraordinary labour, sacrifice, and devotion required to create spaces of warmth and belonging. Their story demanded articulation.

 

The Silent Song of the African Savannah was conceived more serendipitously. A leisurely retreat became a transcendent encounter. Gazing through my Leica, I found myself immersed in a dialogue with the wild, beings of immense power and quiet restraint, sovereign participants in an ancient equilibrium.

 

In that shared stillness, a profound respect blossomed, and I knew I had to translate it into a visual language capable of conveying humility, reverence, and the ineffable poetry of coexistence.

 

Together, these books form a diptych—one inward-facing, the other expansive—each an invitation to linger, to look beyond surfaces, and to engage with the unseen forces that shape our world. They are meditations on presence, labour, solitude, and communion, crafted for those who approach art not merely to observe, but to feel.

 

Q: How did you choose the images to include in each book?

 

A: For Behind The Scenes, the images were chosen not as isolated photographs, but as notes in a symphony of lives. Each sequence was designed to allow viewers to hear the heartbeat of the world I had witnessed.

 

Travel is often a meticulously choreographed ballet; we flit from scene to scene, obsessed with perfection, missing the unheralded poetry of fleeting gestures and quiet devotion. I sought to capture these hidden moments of grace, honouring the unsung heroes whose work is motivated less by reward than by purpose.

 

With The Silent Song of the African Savannah, my lens turned outward in reverent curiosity. I was captivated not by spectacle, but by intimacy: a glance, a pause, a subtle tension between predator and prey. I selected images that reflected the creatures’ presence in the ecosystem and their profound resonance with human experience—curiosity, playfulness, familial bonds.

 

The guiding question was simple: Does this image carry truth? If it spoke to the narrative, to emotion, to the unseen rhythm of life, it stayed. Otherwise, it was set aside. The final selection became more than a collection; it became a dialogue, inviting viewers to linger, to listen, and to dance along with the hidden symphony of the world I had come to love.

 

Q: In Behind the Scenes, what did you see as the relationship between the images and the text?

 

A: The dialogue between image and text is rooted in raw, unvarnished emotion. Across industries—from verdant farms to polished hospitality corridors—the throughline was passion. I saw it in the furrowed brows of farmers, in the meticulous gestures of hospitality professionals. My Leica froze these moments; my words articulated their rhythm and poetry.

 

The images capture what the eye perceives; the text gives voice to what the heart senses. Together, they form a layered portrait of humanity at work—a conversation that invites the viewer not just to see, but to feel the devotion, care, and quiet brilliance of lives often hidden behind the scenes.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the books?

 

A: I hope readers encounter a profound, unspoken connection.

 

In Behind the Scenes, I illuminate the quiet grandeur of those whose labour sustains hospitality and agriculture—individuals whose work is relentless, selfless, heroic, and driven by purpose.

 

In The Silent Song of the African Savannah, I invite readers into the hushed majesty of the wild, where every glance, movement, and pause speaks to a deeper order, and where human reflection mirrors the creatures’ innate grace and tenderness.

 

Together, the books form a harmonious symphony: the images speak, the text whispers, and the reader is invited to linger, to feel, to perceive the hidden cadences of life—the invisible threads of labour, care, and existence pulsing beneath the surface.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am embarking on a new book, a voyage into the shadows of an ancient civilization, where whispers of forgotten lives linger like echoes in a vast, deserted hall. Secrets buried for centuries beckon, stories waiting to be stirred. It is a dance with ghosts, a conversation with history itself—fragile, relentless, utterly consuming.

 

Shot entirely with a Hasselblad, this project promises images of startling clarity and provocative depth—photographs that will make viewers hold onto their seats, suspended between awe and discovery. Only fragments can be revealed now; the rest waits to be discovered between the pages, where image and word collide and the past awakens.

 

Soon, my journey takes me to Paris in May 2026, where my photography will be unveiled in a gallery in the vibrant heart of the city’s artistic soul. These images, born of observation, purpose, and passion, will do more than decorate walls—they will resonate with the lives, moments, and truths I have witnessed.

 

The exhibition is not a display; it is an invitation, a conversation between viewer and subject, a bridge between captured moments and the soul of the world I seek to immortalize.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I began my journey in journalism and writing five years ago, alongside a 14-year career in the agricultural industry, each path shaping my understanding of the world and the stories I wished to tell. As a freelance writer and photographer, my work has appeared in The Singapore Airlines in-flight magazine, Eater, The Smart Local, the Asian Food Network, and Le Cordon Bleu.

 

Photography has always been my most intimate medium, evolving from landscapes to introspective monochromatic scenes that reveal the soul rather than the surface.

 

Inspired by Ted Grant—“If you photograph people in black and white, you photograph their souls; if you photograph them in colour, you photograph their clothes”—I am drawn to moments suspended in time, where emotion and atmosphere converge.

 

I seek the delicate balance of architecture, people, and animals, composing scenes that pause life like a dancer mid-leap, reflecting the deepest moods, tensions, and resonances of the human and natural experience.

 

While techniques may shift, emotion, drama, and passion remain constants.

 

Among my defining milestones are serving as Global Brand Ambassador for the luxury Singapore tableware brand Luzerne and publishing Behind the Scenes and The Silent Song of the African Savannah. Both books are currently on display and available for purchase at the Singapore Photography Museum (Objectifs), and accessible nationwide through Singapore National Library outlets.

 

Through these projects, I have fused photography and storytelling into a voice wholly my own—inviting galleries, collectors, and viewers to experience the world with a depth, intensity, and intimacy that lingers long after the gaze has moved on.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Suma Subramaniam

  


 

 

Suma Subramaniam is the author of the new middle grade novel V. Malar: Greatest Ranger of All Time. Her other books include V. Malar: Greatest Host of All Time.  

 

Q: What inspired this new adventure for your character V. Malar?

 

A: I wrote my MFA thesis on how animals are represented in children’s and young adult books. At the time, I never imagined exploring the natural world myself or seeing endangered species up close. But that became the starting point for my middle‑grade book V. Malar, Greatest Ranger of All Time.

 

Animal stories have always been common in children’s literature. However, when I searched for mentor texts, I realized that stories about Asian wildlife and nature conservation were missing. I knew I had to visit the natural forests of the Western Ghats in South India to write Malar’s adventures authentically.

 

This story grew from my desire to inspire empathy, respect, and appreciation for the natural forests of South Asia.

 

Q: Do you think Malar has changed at all from the first book to this one?

 

A: Malar’s core traits and familiar demeanor remain steady throughout the story, but the new friendships she forms at camp spark meaningful growth.

 

Before attending camp, she had never spent a night away from her parents. Over the course of her stay, Malar learns to be independent, navigate challenges on her own, and build connections with her campmates.

 

She doesn’t undergo a fundamental transformation. I wanted to preserve the qualities her readers know and love. Instead, Malar adapts to her environment, applies her strengths to solve problems, and gathers new life lessons along the way.

 

Q: What do you think Archana Sreenivasan’s illustrations add to this new book?

 

A: Archana Sreenivasan’s illustrations bring the landscape and rich biodiversity of the South Indian Western Ghats vividly to life. One of the most rewarding parts of our collaboration was that I didn’t need to include any art notes. Because Archana is based in India, she portrayed them with authenticity and depth.

 

Q: Did you need to do much research to write the book, and if so, did you learn anything especially surprising?

 

A: My research for the book was extensive. I read many sources and traveled to the forests of the Western Ghats. This mountain range stretches across six Indian states. Its size is similar to the Cascade Range in the Pacific Northwest.

 

The Western Ghats are older than the Himalayas. They are a UNESCO World Heritage site. Many plants and animals found there exist nowhere else. The region also feeds rivers that support more than 200 million people.

 

What surprised me most was how much the landscape endured. For centuries, the forests have faced deforestation, farming, climate change, and large projects like dams and tramways. Yet the wildlife and forests continue to survive. Their resilience shows how extraordinary this habitat truly is.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I’m currently drafting and revising a few middle‑grade and picture book projects. Meanwhile, two picture books, Karma Is Action and Ahimsa Is Everywhere, along with the third book in the V. Malar series, will release in 2027.

 

Summer 2027 will bring two new books from Candlewick Press: Karma Is Action, illustrated by Lavanya Naidu, and V. Malar: Greatest Hallowali of All Time, illustrated by Archana Sreenivasan. In fall 2027, Ahimsa Is Everywhere, illustrated by Shrija Jain, will also be published by Kids Can Press.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Suma Subramaniam. 

Feb. 8

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
Feb. 8, 1940: Ted Koppel born.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Q&A with Clara Kumagai

  


 

 

 

Clara Kumagai is the author of the new young adult novel Songs for Ghosts. She also has written the YA novel Catfish Rolling. She is from Canada, Japan, and Ireland. 

 

Q: How was Songs for Ghosts’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?

 

A: I always find titles really difficult! I had a list of possible titles, and they kept getting longer and more abstract, and in the end I went back to the title very close to the top of the list: Songs for Ghosts. (The title at the very top turned out to be taken!)

 

As the novel is largely a ghost story, it seemed right to have that in the title, and music is a big part of the story too, not only because of the Madama Butterfly inspiration but because of the music that [my characters] Adam and the diary writer play.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the story?

 

A: Because reading can be so private and subjective, I hope that readers take away something person to them, whether that’s a character that resonates with them or an interest in Japanese folklore.

 

For the particular themes of identity and culture, I wanted to show how Adam and the diary writer respond and learn through encountering other cultures and stories. How do they adapt and understand these differences and similarities? I think that considering other perspectives is incredibly valuable not just in fostering empathy but in opening up to the world.

 

I also wanted to show that the adults in the book are also learning, understanding and growing—that doesn’t end when you stop being a teenager!

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Songs for Ghosts pulls on many Japanese stories—not just ghost stories and folklore but on a Japanese epic called The Tale of the Heike. This is cycle of stories traditionally told with an instrument called a biwa, which the diary writer learns to play (and which her grandmother played, too).

 

I wanted the novel to have the feeling of echoes, of stories within stories and how they are passed on and shared. I would love if readers found an interest in these old stories and read more of them.

 

There is also a little secret: I wrote one of the folklore stories—maybe you can guess which one!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with R.K. Harrington

  


 

 

R.K. Harrington is the author of the new novel Kindred Schemes. Also an engineer, she lives in the Washington, D.C., area.

 

Q: What inspired you to write Kindred Schemes, and how did you create your character Alaina?

 

A: I have always loved stories. As a reader, I go through many genres, but I always come back to historical romance; it is my absolute favorite genre, an escape that feels grounded.

 

I was reading a book one day and thought, maybe I should give this a try? I said it out loud to my husband as a joke, but he encouraged me to give an earnest try (even if I was an engineer by day).

 

As for my inspiration, I would say that is all the greats before me: Jane Austen, Kathleen E. Woodiwiss, and Julia Quinn (and many more!).

 

My character Alaina grew organically as I wrote. The more time I spent with her, the more she took shape. There is always some element of personal experience a writer builds into their characters (maybe I am a bit of a bookworm). That is the starting point. But then they become their own person on the page. By the end of writing Kindred Schemes, I can imagine Alaina’s whole life.

 

Q: Did you need to do any research to write the book, and if so, did you learn anything that especially surprised you?

 

A: I did a bit of research for this book, but as an avid reader of Regency romance novels myself, I mostly relied on patterns in that genre that I felt were already ingrained in my mind.

 

However, one of my pet peeves is the feeling of “time travel” in books and shows (how did they get there so fast?), so I did learn speeds and traveling times by carriage. Interesting fact: Horse drawn carriages can go 4-12 miles per hour. Also, 10 mph is pretty fast (https://www.thehenryford.org/explore/blog/the-carriage-era-horse-drawn-vehicles)

 

Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?

 

A: When I first started writing Kindred Schemes, I had an outline in hand and as I closed in on the end of the first half, I realized my mind didn’t want to follow that path. So, I crumpled up my plan and went full-on pantser. I had a general idea of where I was ending, but I certainly discovered how I was going to get there along the way!

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the story?

 

A: I hope that readers take away two things: (1) That true love conquers all (HEA is a must!), and (2) People are complex, often flawed, individuals. Life and people have nuance and I want my readers to identify and empathize with my characters.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I have finished the first draft (and a couple rounds of editing) on book two of the Schemes series. The working title is Risky Schemes and it follows another couple in my Regency world. There are some familiar bad guys that finally find justice (or maybe justice finds them). My editors have loved this new book, but I still have much more to polish.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Since I have started writing, I am amazed by how many stories live in my head. Just right now, I can imagine six additional novels (three in this series, and three more set in the post-crusades era). I honestly do not feel like I can write fast enough.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Feb. 7

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

Feb. 7, 1867: Laura Ingalls Wilder born. 

Friday, February 6, 2026

Q&A with Loretta Ellsworth

  

Photo by Tricia Riggin Photography

 

Loretta Ellsworth is the author of the new novel The Jilted Countess. It was inspired by the true story of a Hungarian countess who emigrated to Minnesota after World War II. Ellsworth's other books include Stars Over Clear Lake. She lives in Minnesota. 

 

Q: The Jilted Countess was inspired by a real story--how did you first learn about it?

 

A: In 2015, there was an article in the Minneapolis Star Tribune newspaper, which mentioned the countess. It referenced the original articles in 1948 and asked readers if anyone knew what happened to her. Unfortunately, no one replied.

 

So I decided to look up the 1948 articles myself (on microfiche) at the Minnesota History Center. I became obsessed with her story and did everything I could to find out what became of her, but with no success. But I did come away with a great story!

 

Q: What did you see as the right balance between fiction and history as you wrote the book?

 

A: I wanted to use as much true history as I could. As a matter of fact, I purchased the rights to the original articles, and used them in my book (with a bit of editing for length).

 

I spent so much time in research trying to find the real countess, but I had no name (they used a fake name in the newspaper), and I didn’t even know what town she ended up in.

 

I ultimately had to give myself permission to finish her story, to use as much history as I had in the first half and let my imagination create the second half of the book.

 

Q: Can you say more about how you researched the novel? Did you learn anything that especially surprised you?

 

A: As noted above, I spent way too much time at the Minnesota History Center looking up articles. I also looked up marriage records for the timeframe in which she would have been married, looking for Hungarian-sounding names, then checking obituaries as well.

 

I also read a great deal about Hungary during WWII, both fiction and nonfiction, and researched places in the Twin Cities where she might have had her dates. 

 

I was surprised by how quickly the responses came to the news article - I found out that in 1948 most towns had mail service two or three times a day! And, of course, I was surprised by how many men offered to marry her!

 

Q: The writer Heather Webb said of the book, “The Jilted Countess is a fascinating and tender tale of new beginnings, finding love in unexpected places, and the path to healing in the aftermath of war.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: That’s a very generous description, and I thank her for her kind blurb as well. I read a great deal of historical fiction and I’m always struck by how resilient people are who face tremendous heartbreak and challenges. It takes a special kind of strength and courage to marry a stranger and start a new life rather than go back to a country under Communist regime.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I’m working on another historical novel that goes back and forth in time between WWII and 1997 and takes place in the US and Japan.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I included a photo of the real countess in the Author Note at the back of the book. I’m hoping this will lead to finding out who she is. Stay tuned!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Loretta Ellsworth.