What I learnt about Singapore
Singapore is a place that constantly surprises you. It’s small but mighty, strict but creative, and deeply rooted in tradition while racing toward the future. If I had to sum it up in three highlights:
- It’s one of the world’s smallest countries, but also one of the richest, safest, and most efficient.
- It’s a multicultural society where Chinese, Malay, Indian, and Western influences blend seamlessly.
- It’s a green, tech-savvy city that’s always planning for the next 50 years.
Important Ideas and Facts:
- Geography and Climate:
- Singapore is a compact island nation located just north of the equator, at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula.
- It consists of one main island and about 60 smaller islets, with a total land area of around 728 square kilometers.
- The terrain is mostly flat, with gentle hills in the center. Bukit Timah Hill is the highest point at 166 meters.
- The country has a tropical rainforest climate, hot, humid, and rainy all year round.
- Despite its dense urban development, nearly half the island is covered in greenery, including parks, nature reserves, and vertical gardens.
- Demographics:
- Singapore has a population of about 6 million people, with a mix of citizens, permanent residents, and foreign workers.
- The ethnic makeup is roughly 76% Chinese, 15% Malay, 7.5% Indian, and a small percentage of other groups.
- English is the main working language, but Malay, Mandarin, and Tamil are also official languages.
- The country has one of the world’s lowest fertility rates (1.1 births per woman) and one of the highest life expectancies (over 84 years)
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- An aging population is one of Singapore’s biggest challenges, with over 16% of citizens already over 65
- History:
- Singapore was founded as a British trading post by Sir Stamford Raffles in 1819.
- It became a crown colony in 1867, was occupied by Japan during WWII, and briefly joined Malaysia before becoming fully independent in 1965.
- Since independence, it has transformed from a struggling port city into a global financial and innovation hub.
- Much of this transformation is credited to its first Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew, whose policies emphasized discipline, education, and economic openness
- Economy:
- Singapore has one of the highest GDPs per capita in the world, over $90,000 in 2024.
- Its economy is built on finance, trade, logistics, and high-tech manufacturing, especially semiconductors.
- The Port of Singapore is one of the busiest in the world, and Changi Airport is consistently ranked among the best.
- The country is a major player in the global electronics supply chain and is investing heavily in AI and green technologies.
- Despite its success, Singapore is vulnerable to global trade disruptions and climate change, especially rising sea levels.
- Culture:
- Singapore is a cultural mosaic, where Chinese, Malay, Indian, and Western traditions coexist and influence each other.
- The city celebrates a wide range of festivals, Chinese New Year, Hari Raya, Deepavali, and Christmas, with equal enthusiasm.
- Food is a national obsession. Hawker centers serve everything from laksa and satay to biryani and chili crab.
- The arts scene is growing, with museums, galleries, and festivals that reflect both local heritage and global trends.
- Social norms emphasize respect, cleanliness, and order, but there’s also a quiet rebellious streak in its literature, comedy, and underground art.
Singapore is a place that proves small can be powerful, especially when you plan for the long game.
What I read for Singapore
Summary
Set in Singapore, How We Disappeared tells the interwoven stories of Wang Di, an elderly woman who carries the trauma of being forced into sexual slavery during the Japanese occupation, and Kevin, a twelve-year-old boy who uncovers a family secret after his grandmother’s cryptic deathbed confession. As Kevin investigates the past, Wang Di finally begins to speak about the horrors she endured as a “comfort woman,” breaking decades of silence. The novel moves between the 1940s and early 2000s, exploring how war leaves lasting scars not just on individuals but across generations. It’s a deeply human story about memory, shame, survival, and the quiet resilience of those who were never allowed to speak.
Thoughts
I wasn’t aware of the concept of ‘comfort women’ or the atrocities committed by Japanese during the war. Reading about Singapore was enlightening to me in that perspective. Jing-Jing Lee writes with such tenderness and restraint, allowing the emotional weight of the story to unfold slowly and powerfully. It’s not just a novel about war, but about healing, dignity, and the courage it takes to remember. This book has heart as well as history and hence I mark it as star book for Singapore.
Other books from the country

Crazy Rich Asians
Author: Kevin Kwan
Genre: Satirical Romantic Comedy
Paperback: 544 pages
Audiobook: 13h 53m
Rachel Chu, a Chinese-American professor, agrees to spend the summer in Singapore with her boyfriend, Nick. She expects a quiet family visit, until she discovers Nick is heir to one of Asia’s richest dynasties. Thrust into a world of private jets, couture drama, and scheming socialites, Rachel must navigate a society obsessed with wealth, status, and tradition.
This book was a wild ride, funny, outrageous, and surprisingly sharp. I loved how it pokes fun at the ultra-rich while still giving us a heartfelt love story.

Last Tang Standing
Author: Lauren Ho
Genre: Contemporary Rom-Com
Paperback: 416 pages
Audiobook: 12h 39m
Andrea Tang is a 33-year-old lawyer in Singapore with a great job, a swanky condo, and a meddling Chinese-Malaysian family desperate to see her married. Between a charming entrepreneur and her office rival, Andrea must figure out what she really wants, while dodging aunties and awkward Tinder dates.
Andrea is hilarious, flawed, and totally relatable. This book made me laugh out loud and also reflect on the pressure to “have it all.”

Sisters Under the Rising Sun
Author: Heather Morris
Genre: Historical Fiction
Paperback: 400 pages
Audiobook: 10h 58m
Set during WWII, this novel follows Norah Chambers, an English musician, and Sister Nesta James, an Australian nurse, as they survive the bombing of their ship and endure years in a brutal Japanese POW camp. Amid starvation and fear, they form a sisterhood that keeps hope alive.
This story broke my heart and lifted it at the same time. It’s about courage, friendship, and the power of music in the darkest places.

Living the Asian Century: An Undiplomatic Memoir
Author: Kishore Mahbubani
Genre: Memoir / Political History
Paperback: 336 pages
Audiobook: 9h 47m
From growing up in poverty in 1950s Singapore to becoming a top diplomat and UN ambassador, Mahbubani shares his personal journey alongside Singapore’s rise. It’s part memoir, part insider’s view of global politics, and a reflection on Asia’s growing influence.
This book is honest, sharp, and full of insight. I loved how it blends personal stories with big-picture thinking. I learnt a lot about Singapore from this book

King Rat
Author: James Clavell
Genre: Historical Fiction / War
Paperback: 368 pages
Audiobook: 15h 55m
Set in Changi Prison during WWII, this novel follows an American corporal who thrives in the black market and a British officer who questions the cost of survival. Based on Clavell’s own experience as a POW, it’s a gritty, gripping look at life in captivity.
This book was intense and unforgettable. It doesn’t sugarcoat anything, but it also shows the strange ways people find hope and power in the worst situations.

Sugarbread
Author: Balli Kaur Jaswal
Genre: Coming-of-Age / Contemporary Fiction
Paperback: 280 pages
Audiobook: 8h 45m
Ten-year-old Pin lives in 1990s Singapore, caught between her mother’s silence, her grandmother’s strict rules, and the racial tensions at school. As secrets from the past begin to surface, Pin tries to make sense of who she is, and who she’s allowed to be.
This book is quiet but powerful. It captures childhood confusion so well, and the way food, memory, and identity are all tangled up.

The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye
Author: Sonny Liew
Genre: Graphic Novel / Political Satire
Paperback: 320 pages
Audiobook: Not available
A fictional biography of a comic artist whose work mirrors Singapore’s political history. Through comics within comics, Liew explores censorship, identity, and the cost of progress, with humor, heart, and stunning visuals.
This book is one of the most unique graphic novel I have read. The layering of comic strips within a comic was quite ingenious. It presents Singapore’s past through art and satire

State of Emergency
Author: Jeremy Tiang
Genre: Historical Fiction / Political
Paperback: 280 pages
Audiobook: 7h 44m
Spanning from the Malayan Emergency to Operation Spectrum, this novel follows a family caught in Singapore and Malaysia’s political upheavals. It’s a story of activism, silence, and the cost of speaking out.
This book gave me chills. It’s beautifully written and unflinching. A quiet, powerful reminder of the stories that don’t make it into textbooks.

Now You See Us
Author: Balli Kaur Jaswal
Genre: Mystery / Social Fiction
Paperback: 320 pages
Audiobook: 11h 11m
Three Filipina domestic workers in Singapore team up to solve a murder that could have happened to any of them. A story of friendship, injustice, and quiet resistance, told with humor and heart.
This was such a satisfying read. It’s part mystery, part social commentary, and full of heart. I loved how it gave voice to women who are often invisible in society.

The Great Reclamation
Author: Rachel Heng
Genre: Historical Fiction / Magical Realism
Paperback: 464 pages
Audiobook: 15h 40m
Ah Boon, a boy from a fishing village, has a gift, he can find magical islands. As Singapore transforms, he must choose between love, loyalty, and progress. A sweeping story of land, loss, and longing.
This book is stunning. It’s lyrical, sweeping, and deeply emotional. I felt like I was watching Singapore grow up through Ah Boon’s eyes.
Do you have any other recommendation from this country? Please share it in comments.
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