“The book charms immediately with prose in the vein of the idyllic village stories of Indian writer R. K. Narayan, written in the 1940s. Like Narayan, Mohamed Latiff can turn the backbreaking labour of fetching water from a well into a lyrical adventure. [...] For non-Malay readers, Confrontation is an engrossing exploration of history from a different perspective, as it makes readers share Adi’s dawning awareness of his family’s social position and then his heady delight at the notion of a state where everyone will speak his language. Even for readers who know what happened next, the ending of the book comes as a shock, followed by a strong urge to read more from this disarmingly powerful voice.”
—Akshita Nanda, The Straits Times
“Confrontation is a ‘must-read’ for anyone keen to experience the anxiety and loss of the Malay community leading up to the separation of Singapore from Malaysia. Latiff’s deep exploration of shattered dreams and alienation in one’s own land recalls a time and place that no longer exists, with characters who are indelibly memorable.”
—Isa Kamari, Cultural Medallion recipient and author of The Tower
“Much thought has gone into the book’s design, particularly the cover and the illustrations within. It has one of the most arresting covers I have seen in a long time”
—Siti Nuraishah Ahmad, Asiatic IIUM Journal of English Language and Literature
“Mohamed Latiff Mohamed has whipped up a sense of nostalgia towards something that should not have been gone. He succeeds in presenting lost time just as writers such as Kipling succeeded in representing an exotic world.”
—Professor Emeritus Dr Budi Darma, Surabaya State University
“He is a writer committed to concrete and moral realism, yet very pronounced in playing with the imageries of satire and symbolism so as to create a literature worthy to be named as emblematic of human conscience against dehumanization. His commitment to address the community’s spiritual, psychological, historical and moral needs is undisputed. To acknowledge this is the start of recognising a literature to build humanity, and Latiff is surely one of its master builders.”
—Dr Azhar Ibrahim Alwee, National University of Singapore
“To be reminded that history should be understood via multiple perspectives, move on to the excellent Confrontation by Mohamed Latiff Mohamed...An account of kampung life in 1960s Singapore, Confrontation is an eye-opening account of life from the minority perspective. Schoolboy Adi is not expected to aspire to be a doctor or engineer, until the proposed merger with Malaysia puts him and his command of the Malay language at an advantage...[a] young lad whose search for identity mirrors the confusion in the country at the time.”
—Akshita Nanda, ‘10 Singapore stories to ponder’, The Straits Times
“Readers in English have begun to discover him, thanks to Confrontation, a 2013 translation of his novel, Batas Langit (1996), from Epigram Books...Confrontation is the story of a young kampung dweller in the 1960s whose world changes because of the proposed merger of Singapore and Malaysia. It captures the struggle to survive in those days and the rifts and links between different communities. Long looked down on for being Malay, the protagonist Adi finds himself suddenly fashionable during the days when merger is in the air and speaking Malay is a passport to a white-collar, financially secure future - a future that never materialised and echoes some of Latiff's own experiences.”
—Akshita Nanda, ‘'Singapore is still my home'’, The Sunday Times
“Singapore in the turbulent '60s is evoked through a narrative pungent with details—of communal wells, leaky zinc roofs and kerosene lamps. Mohamed Latiff Mohamed trains his sensitive and painterly prose on the eccentric characters of Kampung Pak Buyung and their sometimes funny, sometimes tragic lives.”
—Alfian Sa’at, Resident Playwright with W!LD RICE and author of Malay Sketches