Friday, March 20, 2015

TCOI ranked 3rd for 2014 Best English Adult Non-Fiction


The Star : March 19, 2015 : 

Fairy tale outcome for local authors at awards

PUTRAJAYA: It was a good day for the Malaysian book industry yesterday, as local authors took home many of the major prizes at the MPH Best of 2014 Awards.
Malaysian horror author Tunku Halim took the prize in the Best English Adult Fiction category with his anthology Horror Stories, triumphing over international best-sellers such as Cecilia Ahern’s Love Rosie, Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl, Lang Leav’s Lullabiesand Haruki Murakami’s Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki And His Years Of Pilgrimage.
“The book has long been one of our top sellers,” said Nik Adam, distribution manager of the book’s publisher, Fixi. He accepted the award on behalf of an absent Halim.
“We are surprised that we mana­ged to win in a category with other talented nominees like Murakami, but also very happy, of course,” he added.
Another local winner was cartoonist Datuk Muhammad Nor Khalid, better known as Lat, who won the Best English Adult Non-Fiction award for his latest book, Forever Lat.
The other nominees in this category were Nick Vujicic’s Love Without Limits, Keri Smith’s Wreck This Journal, Boey Chee Ming’s When I Was A Kid 3 and Dr Muhammad Abdul Khalid’s The Colour Of Inequality.
The awards were presented to the winners by Perbadanan Putrajaya president Tan Sri Aseh Che Mat du­ring a special ceremony at the official opening of the Putrajaya International Book Fair (PIBF) here.
The awards were held in conjunction with the PIBF to honour both internationally and locally published books that were released in 2014.
Nominees were selected from a list of over 250 titles, with winners selected based on criteria such as overall sales at MPH bookstores nationwide and online in 2014, as well as reviews and recommendations from book buyers and international websites.
For Malay titles, Azura Rasiddin’s Teman Lelaki Upahan took home the award for Best Malay Fiction, while DIAgnosis by Dr Anwar Faizal, Dr Aizzat and Dr Azah won the Best Malay Non-Fiction award.
Other winners were Tony Robbins’ Money: Master The Game for Best Business book, Master Ally Che’s Reiki for Best Chinese, and Jeff Kinney’s Diary Of A Wimpy Kid Vol 9: The Long Haul for Best Young Adult Fiction.
MPH Bookstores chief operating officer Donald Kee said the award winners this year were “fantastic”.
According to him, the prevalence of local winners is a promising development for the Malaysian book industry.
“We are on the right track, and we need to have more publications and events like this to encourage every­one, from writers to booksellers,” Kee said.
The Star is the media partner for the Putrajaya Book Fair 2015, which is supported by Perbadanan Putrajaya.
Organised by MPH Bookstores, the fair began on Tuesday at the Putrajaya International Convention Centre and will continue until Sunday. For more information, go to mphonline.com/offers/pibf.aspx.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

BFM Breakfast Grille - INEQUALITY - UNCOMFORTABLE FACTS AND FRAMEWORKS

"“Some of the statements in the book would also make uncomfortable reading both for those in power and in the political opposition,” says one reviewer. Now a bestseller, Muhammad’s book takes on many common perceptions about the question of inequality and related policies like the New Economic Policy. But the real strength and contribution of the book is in the new research as well as an insistence to think more deeply about inequality beyond income."


Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Public Seminar in Kedah : All are welcome


Book Review - The Establishment Post

The Colour of Inequality: Ethnicity, Class, Income and Wealth in Malaysia could not have come at a better time.

The book, launched in November last year, covers the themes of ethnicity, class, income and wealth in Malaysia, from the days of the Malay states.

It was published just as Malaysia enters the last leg of a socio-economic development agenda that began in 1970 and will end with Malaysia becoming a high-income nation in 2020.

The statistics-drenched book by Muhammed Abdul Khalid is just the sort of thing needed to make policymakers, technocrats and stakeholders from industries, involved in the crafting of the 11th Malaysian Plan, ask questions on upward mobility, asset ownership and wealth creation and why there are still huge disparities.


Wednesday, February 4, 2015

To Save is Prudent, but to Improve Education is Wise

Slightly more than four decades ago, two academics from University Kebangsaan Malaysia published a paper on the savings rate in Peninsular Malaysia. Drawing from Department of Statistics (DOS) 1957 Household Budget Survey - the last survey undertaken by the colonial government, they found out that on average, Malaysian households saved about $19.47 per month, which translated to a savings rate of nearly 10% of monthly income. Interestingly, they also found out that urban households saved more - 11% of income compared to rural households (8%), and Malay households had a higher propensity to save compared to other groups - on average, Malay households saved 13% of their monthly income compared to 8% in the case of Chinese households.

MPH Best of 2014