New Books Network

Jemimah Wei, "The Original Daughter" (Doubleday/Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2025)

Oct 9, 2025
Jemimah Wei, a debut novelist and National Book Foundation honoree, dives into her novel, which explores the complex sibling dynamics between Genevieve and her adopted sister, Erin, amid Singapore's rapidly modernizing backdrop. She discusses the challenges of portraying class and childhood perceptions in the late '90s and the moral ambiguity of her characters. You'll also hear about her writing process, the surprises in character development, and her future projects. Jemimah's insights make for an engaging conversation about family, rivalry, and personal growth.
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ANECDOTE

A Novel Born From Two Stories

  • Wei explains the novel grew from two separate story strands written since 2014 that merged over years of work.
  • The Original Daughter took about eleven years from first draft to publication after many revisions.
INSIGHT

Everyday Singapore, Not The Postcard

  • Jemimah Wei frames Singapore through an economically squeezed family's lens rather than glossy tourism images.
  • Proximity of wealth and poverty in a small city-state creates tension and aspiration between classes.
INSIGHT

Meritocracy As A Controllable Hope

  • Wei highlights how meritocracy and schooling create perceived mobility even amid structural limits.
  • Children internalize soft privileges and use academic success as a controllable lever toward class change.
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