Grace Chia is a Singaporean writer, poet, journalist and editor.
She has published numerous books, including poetry, non-fiction and fiction books. Cordelia was published by Ethos Books in 2012 and shortlisted for the Singapore Literature Prize; and womango was published by Rank Books in 1998.The Cuckoo Conundrum was featured in The Straits Times as one of the choice picks from a box set series of chapbooks published by the NAC-NTU Writer-in-Residencies.
womango engages confessional poetry, poetic prose, concrete poetry and performance poetry to explore themes of identity politics from an Asian, female point of view. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, former Director of the Singapore Writers Festival, Paul Tan, described her work, along with Cyril Wong, as "sensuous and provocative".Publishers Weekly singled out her short story, "Dewy", amongst many others in the speculative fiction anthology, Fish Eats Lion: New Singaporean Speculative Fiction edited by Jason Erik Lundberg for being one of two "uncomfortable takes on domestic employment's darker side".
Her poetry and short stories have been anthologised in literary journals and educational textbooks in Singapore, the US, Australia, Germany, France, and Serbia, including Singapore Literature in English: An Anthology, Understanding Literature, Mining for Meaning, Merlion: An Anthology of Poems, Fish Eats Lion, SilverKris, Di-Verse-City, HOW2, Stylus Poetry Journal, die horen, La Traductiere and Knijzevne Novine.
She edited a selection of poetry by women from and living in Singapore titled Modern Singapore Poetry for an edition of HOW2, an online journal based in Arizona State University.
Chia has been invited to read at various international literary festivals, including the Austin International Poetry Festival, Queensland Poetry Festival, National Young Writers' Festival (Newcastle, Australia) and Singapore Writers Festival. In the UK, she performed her poetry as part of an artistic multimedia ensemble at the Royal College of Art and the Guildhall School of Music & Drama with Vuk Krakovic and Len Massey. Along with a group of literary activists in the wake of the late 90s literary renaissance of Singapore, including Alvin Pang, Toh Hsien Min and Cyril Wong, Chia was invited to read at the University of California-Berkeley, the University of California-Santa Barbara and the University of California-Santa Clara.