18 winning women writers
January 30, 2009Posted on March 17th, 2008 under Art & Living Achievements
By Alfred A. Yuson
Oh, and one man. But we’ll get to him later.
Last Tuesday was a big day for 13 women writers who were honored at the Ateneo’s Mateo Ricci Hall with their inclusion in a prestige roster as “New Stars” of Philippine literature.
A brainchild of ALIWW or the Ateneo Library of Women’s Writings, which started an annual lecture-exhibit series 12 years ago to honor the memory of Paz Marquez Benitez, this year’s innovation veered from the usual practice of singling out an established Filipina writer as the subject.
Previous honorees had included the illustrious likes of Angela Manalang Gloria, Linda Ty Casper, Gilda Cordero Fernando, Tita Lacambra Ayala and Virginia Moreno.
This year, ALIWW named 13 emerging women writers below the age of 40, whom ALIWW director Edna Zapanta Manlapaz observed in her opening remarks as “chronologically constitut(ing) the fourth generation of writers following Paz Marquez Benitez.” Thus, for the 12th PMB Lecture/Exhibit, it was 12 plus one for good measure!
Edna recounted: “When we were in search of a title for this event, we thought: why not ‘New Stars,’ a playful allusion to ‘Dead Stars,’ written by PMB, published in 1927, and acknowledged as the first modern Filipino short story.”
She also clarified that ALIWW is not an award-giving body but “an archive that procures, preserves and promotes the writings of Filipino women of achievement in all fields.”
Named as the 13 New Stars were Frances Alcaraz, Nikki Go Alfar, Christine Bellen, Becky Bravo, Conchitina Cruz, Nerissa del Carmen Guevara, Cyan Abad Jugo, Mookie Katigbak, Fran Ng, Jema Pamintuan, Rica Bolipata Santos, Girl Valencia, and Mirava Yuson (ehem).
“Predictably,” Manlapaz said, “the writings of these 13 aspiring writers first emerged in the pages of magazines and journals, in anthologies and in textbooks, not just here in the Philippines but also abroad. But today, each of these 13 writers has at least one published book to her name. Among them they have published 28 titles.”
Children’s literature is but one genre these young writers have engaged in, with Fran Ng authoring seven children’s books, three of which won the National Book Award, while Becky Bravo has published four books for children and gained first prize in the Palanca Awards for two of her stories. Girl Valencia won an NBA last year for a children’s book, and our 16-year-old daughter Mirava co-authored a children’s book when she was five, won the RCBC Kwentong Kalikasan national contest at 8, and has contributed a teen story and book reviews to READ magazine.
Multi-media has also been fair game for this “NOW generation.” Christine Bellen collaborated on a stage musical retelling of the stories of Lola Basyang. Nerisa Guevara has an award-winning CD of her poems. Girl Valencia has a music CD of songs she composed. Nikki Alfar and Cyan Abad Jugo contribute to Mango Jam, a girl power comics series.
Fran Ng used to edit Seventeen magazine. “Chingbee” Cruz edits Forum, a UP publication, while Rica Bolipata Santos writes a regular column for The Philippine Star. “Punch” Alcaraz designs websites.
Highlighting the event was a solo dance number by Nerissa Guevara while Mookie Katigbak read a poem. Girl Valencia sang, and Chingbee Cruz delivered the response in behalf of all the honorees. Special guest was Virginia Benitez Licuanan, Paz’s daughter, who received the individual albums prepared by the 13 honorees.
ALIWW had fashioned a questionnaire and asked them to write down their answers in a big scrapbook - whose pages they could fill up any way they wished. These scrapbooks now serve as their initial installment in the document box at the ALIWW archives already bearing their names.
Thirteen humongous tarpaulins honoring each writer were also hung alongside the pathway that led to the rites site. Before the event began, guests perused the scrapbooks placed on high tables by the tarps, which will be placed inside Ricci Hall until January. The albums will in turn be exhibited at ALIWW, where guests are invited to “write in” whatever they wish, all the way through the Christmas break, as it’s an inter-active exhibit.
Edna announced that what ALIWW has done is to render “only what all writers, but especially young writers, crave: recognition of work well written and encouragement for work yet to be written.”
Congratulations to this baker’s dozen - all much more than promising, emerging, live and glowing stars.
Last Monday, five other “emerging” women writers (and one plucky, lucky male) also distinguished themselves by winning the top prizes in the 5th Doreen Gamboa Fernandez Food Writing contest.
This year, the theme was “Kakanin” - with the usual mafia of foodies serving as burping judges: punong-abala Micky Fenix, author Felice Prudente Sta. Maria, Food magazine editor Norma Chikiamco, writer-editor Maya Besa Roxas who happens to be the late lamented Doreen Fernandez’s niece, Anvil Publishing director Karina Bolasco, chef and Meralco executive Mol Fernando, and yours truly as a dessert expert and midnight snack aficionado.
Such was the level of competition among the nearly hundred entries that we had to meet over five-hour lunches at least twice - at Edsa Shangri-La Hotel and The Peninsula Manila - and still had to continue our warmed-up, indeed heated, arguments for the final rankings over the Internet. That way, knives were off the table, so to speak.
The winning essays and many others that didn’t make it to the Magic (Kitchen) 6, as well as contributions from the Manila Ladies Branch of the International Wine and Food Society, will be developed into a book early next year.
Seeing how elated the winning writers were at the gloriously designed Café Juanita in Bgy. Kapitolyo, Pasig, especially when their prizes kept piling up on their respective forklifts by the curb outside, I swore to resign as a judge so I can join next year’s contest, May I suggest Canned Corned Beef as the theme?
In fact, bags of Argentina corned beef, Regular and Chunky, were among the winners’ piles of delights. (I managed to purloin one bag off Micky’s otherwise scrupulous watch.) Other sponsors pitching in with cash and products were ABS-CBN Corporation through Gabby Lopez and Monchet Olives; Heritage Foundation, which pledged to endow the DGF Award for three years;
Unilever Food Solutions; Century Tuna represented by Donna Morales; and San Miguel Pure Foods represented by Maricel Manalo and Christine Duran.
Of course, books figured among the prizes, with donations from Anvil Publishing, the CCA or Center for Culinary Arts as represented by Badgie Trinidad, and Summit Publishing through Lisa Gokongwei. Free subscriptions were given for the following magazines: Appetite, as represented by Lorraine Belmonte; Cook by Nancy Reyes; F&B by Manila Lady Nana Ozaeta; Flavors by Dolly Dee and Raffy Zulueta; Food by Manila Lady “Omay” Chikiamco; and Good Housekeeping from Summit Publishing.
Gift certificates were provided by Cravings, Larry Cruz for the LJC Group of Restaurants, Jenny Pena for the InterCon, Joy Wassmer for Shangri-La Makati, Charisse Chuidian for Mandarin Oriental, and Monique Trinidad Toda for New World Renaissance.
Bobby Castillo of Seagull Glass Works donated the trophies, as he has generously done since Year One of the DGF Awards.
CJ Juntereal of the Manila Ladies helped introduce the winners, while chef Myrna Segismundo and writer-editor Chit Lijauco read excerpts from the winning essays. (Full article here)
Taken from Good News Pilipinas Website at this link.
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Did Mark Twain really issue a death sentence to the adjective?
June 4, 2009
Dear Fellow Communicators in English,
Did Mark Twain really issue a death sentence to the adjective? Did George Orwell’s masterpiece, 1984, spell the death of him? How did a pickle bottle get Jose Carillo into the English business? And what’s this new political movement that wants the Philippines to have an “education president”?
You’ll find the answers to all of these questions—and to many more questions about English that perhaps you were too embarrassed or too busy to ask—when you drop by at Jose Carillo’s English Forum today. The Forum is now on its fifth week of freewheeling discussions about English use and misuse—and look at the latest features package it has prepared to make your visit even more enjoyable:
THIS WEEK IN THE FORUM (May 30-June 5, 2009):
•Advice and Dissent: There’s No Need to Reinvent New Usage Rules for English (or, Why You Should Never Judge a Book by its Cover)
•Essays by Jose Carillo: English in a Used Jar (How a pickle bottle got Jose Carillo into the English business)
•Getting Deeper into English: You Don’t Have to Go Far to Get Excellent English Instruction (The King’s English is just a mouse click away!)
•News and Opinion: In Praise of Samuel Johnson,Pioneer English Lexicographer (The “writer’s writer,” they called him )
•Plugging the Gaps in Our English: Lesson # 5 – Constructing the English Sentence (A full-dress review of the various grammatical structures of the language)
•Pour Out Your Mind in English: “A Letter from Germany” by Dr. Erhard Glogowski (He shares an open secret to speaking English well)
So, if you still haven’t joined Jose Carillo’s English Forum, do drop by now to talk shop about English and enjoy all of these featured goodies besides.
See you at the Forum!
With my best wishes,
Posted by Jose A. Carillo at June 4, 2009, 9:14 amJoe Carillo