Showing posts with label Filipino Speculative Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filipino Speculative Fiction. Show all posts

Oct 12, 2013

eBook Review – Alternative Alamat

13133725 Once, last century, I studied Filipino history for my undergraduate degree.  The units were imaginatively named The History of the Philippines Part A and B.  Like most things I studied, I remember little. 

To be fair, it was Darwin and  there was a lot of drinking. 

Thankfully Alternative Alamat by Paolo Chikiamco is imaginative and stock full of story that I never got the chance to encounter as part of my history major.  So while reading Alternative Alamat evokes a certain level of nostalgia, there’s plenty here that is fresh and new and exciting.

Alamat roughly translates as Legend, and so we have Alternative Legends, a collection of stories that explore and bring to life in reader’s(both International and Filipino) minds some of the richness that can be found in Philippine Mythology.  After having chatted with Rochita Loenen-Ruiz and reading Alternative Alamat it becomes apparent to me that this is just a taster, an indication of what is possible, of what more there is to explore in Philippine mythology.

Paolo has managed to gather together an interesting group of stories and writers.  There are names that are familiar to me: Eliza Victoria, Rochita Loenen-Ruiz, Dean Alfar and David Hontiveros but there’s a fair amount that I haven’t had the privilege of reading before.

A quick selection of the tales:

Eliza Victoria, kicks off the collection with Ana’s Little Pawnshop on Makiling St. which also featured in her collection A Bottle of Storm Clouds.  It’s a very good modern rendering of Anagolay, the Philippine Goddess of lost things and a comment perhaps on the modernisation of the Philippines.

Harinuo’s Love Song by Rochita Loenen-Ruiz, is a beautiful retelling of  the myth of the Sky Maiden.  Beautiful and horrifying at the same time.  This story was pleasurable beyond the tale itself. It contains poems within the text but the whole story itself has a very powerful folktale rhythm to it.

Budjette Tan, famous for his Graphic Novel/Comic, Trese (available form Kobo), gives us the The Last Full Show, a slice of life from that world. It’s a good mix of crime/mystery and the supernatural, Philippines style.

Timothy James Dimacali’s Keeper of My Sky was very good and quite sad at the same time.  An ancient story re-crafted in a modern setting and cleverly structured to produce a unique effect.  Reminds me of some of the character reimagining in American Gods.

Mo Francisco, takes another look at Maria Makiling in Conquering Makiling, the goddess of this tale is a little more primal, earthy in her presentation.  The story was vivid and quite humorous.  This is one of those stories that sits quite happily in the realms of magical realism as it does in speculative fiction or fantasy.

There are others in this collection that I will leave to surprise you.  They were all good stories and showcased what can be accomplished with Philippine folk lore and mythology with a range of literary styles.  Dean Alfar finishes off the fiction segment of the collection with a story told in footnotes – a short excerpt from an historical text (real or fabricated I am not sure) is footnoted* and it is these footnotes that builds the story.  It’s an interesting technique and it bridges nicely to the non-fiction articles and interviews that Chikiamco sourced for the collection.

You can’t ask much more from a book than to be intrigued, entertained and educated.  Alternative Alamat achieves all of this admirably.  It’s an important read not only for those wanting diversity in their speculative fiction but also I think for Filipino’s wanting to explore and engage in their mythology.

It is beautifully illustrated by Mervin Malonzo who did the front cover and the interior black and white plates.  At just over $5 AUD via Kobo, this collection is a steal.  If you are a fan of myth and folktale retelling, take a trip to the Philippines, I don’t think you will regret it.


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*A word of warning to Kobo app users – the app as you may know does a terrible job with hyperlinks (ie you can’t use them) so I had to read Dean’s story an another app.

Oct 11, 2013

Galactic Chat 34 – Rochita Loenen-Ruiz

Well here is the latest Galactic Chat which (like all my chats) I thoroughly enjoyed.  As part of the We See A Different Frontier Carnival I encourage you to listen to and to check out all the other folks posting in the Carnival (link) and to monitor the hashtag #wsadf on twitter.

You could also, you know, read We See A different Frontier (my review here).

In this episode Sean chats with Rochita Loenen-Ruiz about her reading experiences growing up in the provinces of the Philippines and the influences on Filipino Writing particularly Speculative Fiction.  They also talk about conceptions of Diversity in the genre and the where the largest misunderstandings seem to be. The finish the show talking about Rochita's story, What Really Happened at Ficandula.

Please enjoy.

or DOWNLOAD

 

Links mentioned:


Hunting for Stories in the Philippines published in Weird Fiction Review (2012)

We See a Different Frontier

Indian SF

The World SF Blog (archived)

Cheeky Frawg

Flipside /Flipreads( for Australian's search on Kobo or Amazon for titles)

Charles Tan

Strange Horizons

Alternative Alamat

The Future Fire

Expanded Horizons

Crossed Genres

Hard Copy Books:


Fabulists and Chroniclers by Christina Pantoja Hidalgo

Author links:

Rochita's Websites: From the Beloved Country , Chie and Weng Read Books

Rochita's Twitter: @rcloenenruiz 

Credits

Interviewer: Sean Wright

Guest: Rochita Loenen-Ruiz

Music & Intro: Tansy Rayner Roberts

Post-production: Sean Wright

Feedback:

Twitter: @galactichat

Email: galactichat at gmail dot com

Sep 30, 2013

Lauriat: A Filipino-Chinese Speculative Fiction Anthology

Lauriat_frontcov-662x1024 And while talking about our neighbours to the north, Charles Tan has an anthology of Filipino-Chinese Speculative Fiction on offer for just 99c if you use this code NG66N at Smashwords. The special runs until the 25th of October.  So, come on 99c peeps that is quite seriously pocket change.  That’s 99 cents to check out some different perspectives.

Lauriat: A Filipino-Chinese Speculative Fiction Anthology

 

 

 

 


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Jul 14, 2013

Filipino Specfic on the Horizon

phili I have just finished my regular quarterly column for International Speculative Fiction.  I have reviewed Dean & Nikki Alfar’s The Best of Philippine Speculative Fiction 2005-2010 (provided by Mr Charles Tan) - I will let you know when it’s published. 

In the meantime if you are curious about stepping outside of the mainstream Anglo-centric genre and reading some great Filipino SpecFic then Cheryl over at Wizard’s Tower has some easily accessible ebooks by Dean Francis Alfar and a fantasy anthology edited by Paolo Chikiamco.

Cheryl also recently recorded a Blue Planet Episode with Dean and Charles Tan.

If you still haven’t had your fill I suggest wandering around the Rocket Kapre site.

Feel free to link to any other great sources of Filipino SpecFic talent in the comments?  Authors, bloggers or commentators.

 


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Apr 14, 2013

Book Review – Seroks (Iteration 1: Mirror Man) by David Hontiveros

HONTIVEROS_seroks1_web

In 2002 David Hontiveros won second prize in Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards- Futuristic Fiction Category for his short story titled Kaming Mga Seroks.  That piece forms the first story in this collection.  I say collection but Seroks is a tightly structured series of stories, so tightly linked that I am inclined to call it a mosaic novella. 

Through a number of forms and perspectives Hontiveros gives us a far future Philippines run by an almost omnipresent Maharlika Company, a world where the Chinese are the dominant force and the United States was bought out in the aftermath of a gene based attack on the male section of the populace leaving them mostly sterile.

If you are a fan of old school Gibsonian Cyberpunk you’ll feel a tingling of familiarity.  Hontiveros, however, drags in some other ideas and influences that give this mosaic a fresh feel -there’s some Superhero DNA, the history of Filipino film is alluded to, and the occurrence of piracy is extrapolated past the point of software and cd’s.

Imagine a world with clones, imagine that film studios can clone actors and have the duplicates or Seroks (took me half the book to realize that Seroks =  Xerox and that it roughly translates to Copies) stand in for them.  Imagine then that these clones or the templates that are used to create them can be pirated.  We have a world that’s ripe for abuse.  We have a world where Seroks, who are for all intents and purposes human, don’t have human rights.

The mosaic follows the fortunes of a group or Seroks owned by aging Filipino movie star and disgraced President Frederico Rubio.  The Seroks are all grown to look like the aging star at the different stages in his movie career, some engineered to be the characters and not merely the actor playing the character.

Seroks is part thriller, part comment on corporate greed, part superhero story.  I love the diversity of writing form that Hontiveros brings to the work; first person point of view, television script, a couple of the pieces described almost in terms of stage directions. It comes as no surprise to me that he writes the Supehero comic series Bathala as I feel he has a very good handle on imagery and conveying that to the reader.

As a first Iteration, a part one, Seroks, does a very good job of laying down a firm foundation and giving the reader some action and resolution.  The world building is fresh and tangible and I think that Hontiveros has played it well; giving us just enough to feel immersed and temporarily satisfied.  I await further iterations. Don’t leave us waiting too long Mr Hontiveros.

The artwork is provided by Alan Navara - the cover and internal story separators. I think he and Visprint should be commended for rounding out the work with high spec. production and simple but striking artwork.

And thanks to Charles Tan for facilitating access to this work.


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Apr 11, 2013

A Bottle of Storm Clouds: Stories …not a review

15828203 Just a short post to give you a heads up.  I have reviewed Eliza Victoria’s A Bottle of Storm Clouds for ISF and that review should be coming out in the next 3 weeks or so. 

In short its good and I think fans of some of the dark fantasy writings of Margo Lanagan and Kaaron Warren might appreciate picking it up.

It’s 200 odd pages of award nominated stories.

and while we are talking about Filipino writers I really liking David Hontiveros’ Seroks - Iteration 1.

 

 

 


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