Rex Shelley

Rex Shelley
BornRex Anthony Shelley
(1930-10-27)27 October 1930
Singapore, Straits Settlements
Died21 August 2009(2009-08-21) (aged 78)
Singapore
Occupation
  • Author
  • engineer
Alma mater
Period1984–2009
GenreFiction (novels) and non-fiction
Subject
Notable works
Notable awards

Rex Anthony Shelley (27 October 1930 – 21 August 2009) was a Singaporean author. A graduate of the University of Malaya in Malaysia and Cambridge trained in engineering and economics, Shelley managed his own business and also worked as member of the Public Service Commission (PSC) for over 30 years. For his service, he was conferred the Bintang Bakti Masyarakat (Public Service Star) by the Government of Singapore in 1978, and an additional Bar the next year.

Shelley started writing fiction late in life, publishing his first novel, The Shrimp People, in 1991 at the age of sixty one. The first substantial work by a Singaporean writer about the Eurasian community in Singapore, it was highly commended by The Straits Times and won the 1992 National Book Development Council of Singapore (NBDCS) Award. The books People of the Pear Tree (1993), Island in the Centre (1995) and A River of Roses (1998), on the same theme, followed within a decade; respectively, they won NBDCS Highly Commended Awards in 1994 and 1996, and the Dymocks Singapore Literature Prize in 2000. In 2007 he was the Singaporean winner of the S.E.A. Write Award. Critics have responded positively to his writing, noting its "passionate, humane" style, and observing how his breadth of life experience gave rise to a talent for characterisation plus an ability to blend "a sharp sense of observed commentary with historical detail".[1]

  1. ^ Stephanie Yap (25 August 2009), "Acute observer of life: Author Rex Shelley, who died last Friday, published his first book at age 61, but his works have left their mark", The Straits Times (Life!) (reproduced on AsiaOne), p. C8, archived from the original on 31 August 2009, retrieved 31 August 2009.