Tag Archives: politics

RFM’s Rising Popularity Among Sri Lankan Readers

RFM has had a significant uptick in the number of views it has been receiving from Sri Lanka. I don’t know what is driving this, but I appreciate it very much and I hope that our Sri Lankan readers find and enjoy whatever they are seeking in RFM.

If you are not familiar with Sri Lankan literature, here is a link to the Wikipedia page on Sri Lankan literature. Also, here is a link to the list of popular Sri Lankan Literature books on Goodreads.

I was surprised to find out that Michael Ondaatje is a Sri Lankan-Canadian author. Perhaps his best known work, The English Patient, came out in 1992 and was made into a popular movie in 1996. I have read the book and have seen the movie. I found both fascinating and the movie helped my visualization of the book immensely. However, the ending of the film varies from that of the book, which I thought was a great ending, but I can see how capturing it on film in 1996 might have been difficult.

I thought the book was beautifully written and I recommend it highly to anyone who enjoys good literature that transcends genres. It is poignant and intricately woven. Ralph Fiennes stars as Almasy, the lead actor and Kristin Scott Thomas as Katherine Clifton, his love interest. Wikipedia sums up the film thus:

The eponymous protagonist [Almasy], a man burned beyond recognition who speaks with an English accent, recalls his history in a series of flashbacks, revealing to the audience his true identity and the love affair in which he was involved before the war. The film ends with a definitive onscreen statement that it is a highly fictionalized account of László Almásy (died 1951) and other historical figures and events. The film received widespread critical acclaim and emerged as a major commercial success at the box-office.

I recommend highly that you read the novel and watch the film in that order.

–Phil Slattery, Publisher, RFM


Image generated by AI. Please let me know if this does not capture Sri Lankan culture accurately.

Adapting to the Foreseeable Future

I try to keep RFM apolitical. However, regardless of anyone’s political leanings, I think most people would agree that troubling times likely lie ahead.

Troubled people often seek relief from their worries by escaping mentally to a better, more peaceful world. Therefore, I believe that RFM will become not only more popular but also more important to people psychologically.

Accordingly, you may gradually see some minor or subtle changes to RFM. The intent of these changes will be to offer people an avenue to a better, although fictional, world.

This might affect what I accept in a slight way, but as always in the past, I will be open to all genres and topics so long as they meet the submission guidelines. The only statement I can make at this point (this is just a vague, raw, undeveloped concept) is that RFM might lean a bit more towards publishing stories about the basics of human existence that unite us worldwide.

What basics do I mean? I mean whatever you see as basic or elemental to human nature. If you’re lost as where to start, I recommend checking out Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs or some other psychological or sociological principles. Those could be starting points, but what really interests me is your ideas based on your observations of humanity. After all, isn’t that where all great literature starts?

I still have no hard date for when RFM will be wide open to submissions, but I may gradually publish more and more of what has already been submitted (I have a tremendous backlog).

Anyway, these are some thoughts for the moment.