Anatomy of an Electoral Tsunami
Author: Lim
Teck Ghee, S. Thayaparan, Terence Netto
Publisher: SIRD
ISBN: 9789672165347
Year: 2018
Weight: 0.380 kg
Price: RM35
‘A magnificent tour de force of Malaysian politics leading
up to the 9th May tsunami by three of our nation’s most prolific and respected
commentators. Together, they took on the political establishment with courage,
determined to speak truth to power as they saw it.
We owe men like these a debt of gratitude for keeping hope
alive during some of our nations darkest moments and for helping us to better
understand the personalities and the issues that were shaping political
discourse at a critical time in our nation’s history.’
Dennis Ignatius
Former Ambassador
‘A commendable collection of articles focusing on the forces
which created the historic GE14 result and bore the hopes of Malaysians for a
New Malaysia.’
Lim Kit Siang
‘Sharp and incisive commentaries on the state of the nation
and the events and key players that shaped the momentous outcome of GE14.
Politically incorrect but more meaningful perspectives than you will find from
Malaysia’s mainstream media.’
Zaid Ibrahim
About the author
Lim Teck Ghee‘s career has straddled academia, civil society
organisations and international development. He was awarded the Harry Benda
Prize in Southeast Asian Studies for his work on the peasantry in colonial
Malaya. He is presently a public policy analyst with a collection of his
writings published recently as Challenging Malaysia’s Status Quo (SIRD, 2017).
S. Thayaparan is a retired Commander of the Royal Malaysian
Navy and the first naval officer to read Law through self-study, subsequently
being called to the bar at Lincoln’s Inn. He served as a UN Volunteer in Sri
Lanka acting as a liaison officer between the LTTE and International Agencies.
He writes a regular column at Malaysiakini and is the author of No Country for
Righteous Men and Other Essays in a Culture of Offendedness (SIRD, 2013).
Terence Netto has been a journalist for more than four decades, a span long enough to discover that observing people in power is fascinating but watching them exercise it is often abhorrent. He writes for Malay Mail and Malaysiakini.