Making History
April 25, 2010
I’ve been reading a lot about Philippine History in the past few weeks which makes me remember taking it up back in grade school and high school. But unlike most people I know, I actually liked the subject!
Well, on second thought maybe I just got blessed of having good teachers every now and then. Looking back –yeah, there were year/grade levels that I too got bored in my History/Sibika at Kultura. I remember having a very stiff, soft-voiced, near-old maid, history teacher in high school. I’m not sure if I actually learned anything from her. To top it all off and as if to spite me, the classes were usually held at 1 PM or 2 PM in the afternoon!
But then there were also the great teachers that I had. My history teacher back in grades 5 and 6 was an about-twenty-years-veteran on the subject –and boy was she entertaining! (Well, most of the time at least) And then my senior year in high school… yeah, I enjoyed history back then too.
Maybe what I am just trying to say is: history should not be boring if you’d be creative in telling it. It’s just as entertaining, intriguing, fun and exciting as your favorite TV series and movies. All you have to do is tell the lessons like one. Heck, for all I know, maybe you’ll even like it better than the movies!
Going back to my readings, I have discovered a lot of minute details in our history. Details that were never told in the classrooms I’ve studied at. I thought if only some of them were told in high school history classes, the subject would not be such a drag.
I was surprised to know how the Katipunan revered Jose Rizal so much, that they hung his portrait in their halls and used his name, “Rizal” as password in their secret organization, much to the disbelief of our National Hero when he learned about it during his trial. How about the Supermo saving Emilio Jacinto on their retreat to Balara? The Spanish bullet got too close for comfort, sparing Bonifacio’s neck, but not his collar.
Then there was the time when Rizal waited by the highway on his horse, for the carriage of the sweet Segunda Katigbak, a girl whom he wooed. He’d be brave against the firing squad when his time comes, but on that moment, he’d withdraw and ride the other way from a lost love.
Could you imagine Andres Bonifacio disguising himself as a woman to avoid detection? Well, he did! And then he lent his legendary bolo to the care of a katipunero, since it was too big to hide under his skirt. Unfortunately, that bolo never found its way back to the Supremo’s hands.
Well, those are just some bits and pieces I’ve discovered in my readings from the pages of Ambeth Ocampo, Teodoro A. Agoncillo, and Leon Maria Guerrero –some of our finest historians.
My next (and biggest) comics project would require me to do all these research on our history from the Rizal, to the Philippine Revolution, until the Philippine-American War. And like I’ve always said before, I am the writer who seldom reads. I can only read up to ten consecutive pages of a book before my eyes get heavy and doze off. The rest of the book would have to wait until the next time I hold the book in my hands. So imagine how long it takes me to finish a novel, much more say –a biography of Jose Rizal? All the readings and research may be tedious tasks, but I will do everything to make the best effort in every aspect of its creation. Because I know once it is completed, it is something that I will be proud of for the rest of my life.
Go Get Your TPGFA Comics Anthology!
April 22, 2010
The late poster that I am; The Philippine Graphic/Fiction Awards Comics Anthology is finally out! To those not familiar with that, it all started several years ago when Neil Gaiman visited the Philippines for the first time. On what he probably thought would be a routine signing and interviews event, transgressed into something much larger than he initially expected. He greatly appreciated how the Filipinos’ received him with “a wall of sound”, before ultimately getting astounded by the plenty amount of untapped talents in the country.
To cut everything short, he, together with Jaime Daez’s Fully Booked chain of bookstores, decided to put up a series of contests that encouraged Filipinos to explore the magical and fantastic world of the unreal and use it in our literature. This, after Mr. Gaiman observed that almost all of the works by local authors that he was able to read, tackled the realities of one’s self and his surroundings. Very few wandered into the realms of our fantastic mythologies and legends. Not that it was a bad thing, but he longed to see Filipino unrealism, created by Filipinos.
The result was The Philippine Graphic/Fiction Awards. The contest that (if I am not mistaken) has spanned seven years since the first challenge was announced to the final judging of the third installment of the series last March.
And now, all the winning entries, plus some other notable entries that didn’t make it, are published in the thickest (and very gorgeous) pinoy comic book that I’ve ever seen. I’d like to mention too how the book itself is great. It’s the best pinoy komiks ever in terms of printing and paper quality! Thank you , Fully Booked for not going cheap on it.
I was blessed to have my entry get picked as a winner in the second TPGFA. My story, “Afterlife” made the third place back in 2007. The experience allowed me to get published alongside an array of highly talented fellow Filipinos who share my passion for creating original stories and comics –not to mention sit and dine beside Neil Gaiman himself. That victory (although it was not the grand prize) also initiated me as a serious comics creator –specially as a writer. It boosted my esteem to write more and somehow, I proved to myself that I can accomplish a lot more in comics than what I usually did before the contest.
It was mentioned in the awarding ceremony of the third contest that Neil and Jaime agreed on three installments of the TPGFA. Did they mean the third TPGFA was the last of it? I am really hoping it wasn’t, because I have set a personal goal to win it one day –I am thinking, the next one!
Click here for a review about the book:
Yes, I am Still Alive!
April 8, 2010
I wouldn’t say I got busy, although I really did at times. Not that I’ve been totally tardy, but I just had my attention diverted into “other things” like this, or this, or playing this, and this, and that, etc… I still do get some free time to blog but either I am lazy, or I would have rather read, instead of write. Write scripts and other stories rather than blog entries.
And guess what? As weird as it is for me to admit, I actually missed blogging! How about that?
I’m kinda feeling that the blog but is just around the corner, waiting to take a hefty bite on me. We’ll find out in the days to come if I’d shoo it away of if I’d let it have its fill.
Summer Komikon 2010 is just around the corner, and every warm-blooded komiks lover should go. And as for the Komiks Manila gang, we’re still gonna have to see what we can come up with. But we will be there come April 17, 2010.
And oh! Why, look at that! Over there at the sidebar, under “Komiks Manila Komiks”. If it’s not the Philippine Graphic/Fiction Awards Comics Anthology from Fully Booked and uhrrm… Neil Gaiman. Some guy named “Jerald Dorado” has his work included in it, and now he thinks he has the right to place it there.
Now, to hit the publish button and then I’m off to bed.







