Monthly Archives: September 2010

Angelica’s Daughters Available Soon in the US

A friend of Nadine’s snapped this photo of the treasures she unearthed at the Manila International Book Fair. Close inspection reveals a copy of…wait for it…Angelica’s Daughters!

photo courtesy of Cindy Karingal

Where do books land, I wonder, once people get them home? I have so many piled next to my bed that they tend to eventually migrate under the bed, where I sometimes lose track of them. When I finally get down on my knees to clear the space, it’s like I just came home from a trip to the bookstore. Speaking of bookstores…people have been asking if Angelica’s Daughters will be available in the States, and the answer is an unequivocal yes!

Linda Nietes of Philippine Expressions Bookshop in Southern California will be carrying it (310-514-9139), as will Cecilia’s own Philippine American Literary House. A few weeks ago I attended a PAWA Arkipelago Reading Series event for Luis Francia’s wonderful (I’m not exaggerating; order a copy right now!) A History of the Philippines: From Indios Bravos to Filipinos. There, I had a chance to speak with Arkipelago Books’ Marie Romero, who said she would be happy to support Angelica’s Daughters by stocking it in her store. We’ll do our best to let you know exactly when the books are available. Meanwhile, make room next to your bed!

Thanks for reading! Check back soon!

~ Veronica

In the Manila Bulletin

Nadine and Susan met with reporter Ronald S. Lim at the Manila International Book Fair. Here is the resulting piece, published earlier this week in The Manila Bulletin:

NOVEL TRAIN
By RONALD S. LIM
September 24, 2010, 11:22am
There’s an old saying that goes, “Too many cooks spoil the broth.”

But that is not the case with “Angelica’s Daughters: A Dugtungan novel.”

Collaboratively written by five woman authors, the novel is a historical romance tracing the romantic adventures and misadventures of a family of strong-willed women through centuries.

The novel is brainchild of five equally talented writers – Cecilia Manguerra-Brainard, Erma Cuizon, Susan Evangelista, Veronica Montes, and Nadine Sarreal. But what is even more amazing is that a huge part of it was constructed without the authors even meeting each other face to face!

Gathered by Brainard in 2002 through the Philippine American Literary House, the women had initially started out as online workshop participants working on a writing prompt every week. The idea of doing a collaborative work was still far from their minds.

“Every week we would have a theme or a sentence to start. It was just casual, nothing structured,” recalls Nadine Sarreal.

“I heard about this workshop and I wrote to Cecilia and asked if I could join. I thought that it would be fun and that it was an interesting group of people,” adds Susan Evangelista.

It wouldn’t be long before the group would find itself looking for a bigger challenge in the form of the dugtungan, a form of collaborative writing popular during the 1920s and 1930s. Their first attempt would be a short story.

“We just wrote an unrequited love story with a comic twist. We sent it off for publication and it got accepted, but it took three years before it came out. We were joking that they accepted it but they’re not going to publish it,” recalls Sarreal with a laugh.

NO FIVE EGOS

After that initial success, the group set its sights on an even bigger goal – writing a full-blown novel. With no specific assignments in mind, the group members found themselves gravitating towards the threads of the story that they were most comfortable in.

“The groupings kind of grew organically. We only had a loose idea of what was going to happen. As it progressed, it just sort of happened that Veronica and I were working on the modern story and Nadine and Cecilia were working on the other one,” says Evangelista.

“We gravitated towards our natural partners. Nobody gave any orders to anybody, no one was dictating anything. The outline came as we went but it wasn’t set in stone,” says Sareal.

The experience, however, wasn’t always smooth sailing. With a bigger plot to contend with, the members of the group would sometimes find themselves at odds with each other.

“Sometimes it was hard. Sometimes, you would get an idea of where you thought something was going, and then the next person would violate your ideas,” says Evangelista. “It was difficult of letting go once other people changed what you had written.”

“I did have a difficult time. I wanted it to go a certain way but the group had decided that they were going to do it a certain way,” admits Sarreal. “There were disagreements, but Cecilia kept us on track whenever things started to go too crazy. Otherwise, it would be five egos going five different directions.”

These minor disagreements, however, would prove to be the least of their problems. When the group submitted an initial draft of the story to Anvil Publishing, the novel got a scathing reception from the critic the publishing house had LIMasked to review the book.

“When we first gave the book to Anvil, they gave it to a critic who absolutely panned it. He said that it had no unity. He said that it was going in too many directions. Our hearts were on the floor. We felt discouraged,” shares Evangelista.

It would take a few months before the group would start working on the novel again, but Sarreal says that the less than flattering review of their earlier work had only spurned them to come up with an even better work.

“We shut down after the critic. We couldn’t write. But there was chatter on the e-mail na kaya natin ito. We slowly as a group kind of rebuilt our confidence,” says Sarreal. “It was for our own psychic health that we finished it just to show that we could rise above what the critic said about us.”

And indeed, the group did have the last laugh, as Anvil Publishing did put out “Angelica’s Daughters”.

“We didn’t have any expectations about getting published. We still would have finished the novel even if there were no offers to be published, but maybe not in such a refined form,” says Sarreal.

WRITING INTO FREEDOM

Both Sarreal and Evangelista agree that the reason everything worked out in the end was the fact that the group had built a strong rapport throughout the years they have been working and writing together online.

“We were a little inhibited at first, but over the years we wrote into freedom. We were freer with each other. We got to know one another’s personalities. The rapport is easier,” says Sarreal.

This understanding of each other’s styles and personalities are invaluable in any collaborative work, according to Sarreal.

“We were all in a workshop together and we understood each others style. We recognize how we are, and we know how to shift and adjust and work with each other without even talking about it,” she shares.

Both Evangelista and Sarreal agree that working together has not only improved their individual writing styles, but has given them confidence with regards to their own skills.

“I would see how much could be done with things. People would see good things in my work that I didn’t see,” explains Evangelista. “Maybe I haven’t learned how Nadine does her detailed histories, but I certainly have learned how to appreciate it.”

“I like working with the group because writing is so solitary. You don’t know if what you’re writing is making any sense. I really valued when somebody would tell me gently things about my work. It’s really improved the way I write,” adds Sarreal.

For writers looking to try out this collaborative form themselves, Sarreal says an open mind is essential if they want their efforts to succeed.

“Writers who want to try this out have to decide how they feel about being directed, so the work comes out still being creative without any of you guys struggling with each other because we’re already struggling with each other,” she says.

But perhaps even more importantly, writers looking to try this out should come into it with a light heart.
“Do it for fun. Be relaxed about it. Don’t be so serious about it that you get aggressive. What fun is that?” ends Sarreal.

Susan & Nadine At the Fair

Angelica’s Daughters has five co-authors, but would you believe that the only one of us who has met all of the others is Cecilia “Boy-Does-She-Get-Around” Brainard? And so it was with great pleasure that Susan Evangelista (who teaches at the State University in Puerto Princesa, Palawan) and Nadine Sarreal exchanged their first non-cyber greeting at the Manila International Book Fair this weekend. Here they are, super-modeling in front of our Angelica’s Daughters banner:

Ane here they are enjoying the literary life with (left to right): Oscar Evangelista, Susan, Ron Lim of the Manila Bulletin (an article about the novel is forthcoming!), Nadine, and Karina Bolasco of Anvil:

Susan reports several fun exchanges with those who stopped by, but certainly the favorite was a young woman who purchased a copy of Angelica’s Daughters signed by Nadine a few days earlier, and then returned to the booth yesterday so Susan could add her signature.

I kinda love that young woman.

Thanks for reading! Check back soon!

~ Veronica

Book Signing @ the Anvil Booth!

If you’re headed to the Manila International Book Fair, make sure to stop by the Anvil booth to meet two of our co-authors:

What: Book signing for Angelica’s Daughters
Where: Manila International Book Fair, SMX Mall of Asia
When: Saturday, September 18, 2010
Who: 3:00 pm – Susan Evangelista / 5:00 pm – Nadine Sarreal

photo via manilabookfair.com

Thanks for reading! Check back soon!

~ Veronica

At the Manila International Book Fair

We’re excited that Angelica’s Daughters is making an appearance at the 31st Manila International Book Fair! The fair is taking place as I type, and it runs through September 19th. The excellent blogger over at Bookmarked posted The Rough Guide to the 31st Manila International Book Fair, and she singles out our publisher, Anvil, describing their booth as, “…one of the booths I spend the most time in. Good buys (especially the latest titles), multiple bargain bins, cozy reading areas, and it’s always a great spot to hobnob with the literati!” Here’s a photo from the first day (via Bookmarked):

I wonder if one of the folks she hobnobbed with was Angelica’s Daughters co-author, Nadine Sarreal? Nadine was at the Anvil booth yesterday, where she signed 20 books or so, and spent some time chatting with folks about the novel. She reports that Angelica’s Daughters will sell for P295, but is discounted 20% at the fair. I think the P295 price point is genius: it makes our novel easily accessible, especially to starving students!

On Saturday, Nadine and Susan Evangelista (our wonderful co-author from Palawan) will be interviewed by Ivy Mendoza. Anvil plans to videotape it, so with a little luck we’ll be able to post it here.

Thanks for reading! Check back soon!

~ Veronica

P.S. Our blogroll is obviously far from complete. New links added daily. Or until the end of time. Whichever comes first.

Angelica’s Daughters – Forthcoming From Anvil

I’ve been staring at the screen for a full 20 minutes now, paralyzed by the unfounded notion that the first post on a new blog carries more import than any other. Where did I get this idea? I just checked to see what I wrote for the first post of my personal blog, which I’ve kept alive (sometimes just barely, but nevertheless) for 7 years. Here’s what it says:

“To blog or not to blog,” was the question. “Blog”—apparently—is the answer.

Okay, I clearly did not get the first-post-is-super-important idea from my own blog. I think I’ll just start at the start:

Angelica’s Daughters is a dugtungan novel co-authored by Filipina writers Cecilia Brainard, Erma Cuizon, Susan Evangelista, Veronica Montes (that’s me), and Nadine Sarreal. Novelist Brian Ascalon Roley (American Son) was kind enough to pen a blurb for our book. He does a terrific job explaining what a dugtungan novel is, so I’ll take the easy route and simply quote him:

“Part of the pleasure of reading Angelica’s Daughters, the engrossing new collaborative novel by five established Filipina writers, is seeing how deftly the authors deal with the challenge of writing in this resurrected literary form. A dugtungan is a genre of Tagalog novel popular early in the 20th century, in which each writer creates a chapter and hands it off to the next, who writes another chapter without direction. The result, in this case, is an ensemble performance that contains something of the exhilaration of theatrical improv. One watches these accomplished authors inventively weave a historical romance, creating gripping heroines and turns of plot, crossing decades and national boundaries, tapping into cultural roots of the Philippines, Spain and America. Reading Angelica’s Daughters is a gripping experience. ~ Brian Ascalon Roley, Author of American Son (W.W. Norton)

I recently said that though I am happy that our dugtungan experiment resulted in a finished, publishable product, what means the most to me is that we five writers worked together in the true spirit of bayanihan. It will be a challenge for the five of us—far-flung as we are—to publicize the book. Cecilia Brainard lives in Santa Monica, CA; Erma Cuizon in Manila; Susan Evangelista on Palawan; I am in the San Francisco Bay Area; and Nadine Sarreal can be found sometimes in Manila and sometimes in Singapore. My hope, though, is that this blog can keep interested readers in-the-loop on upcoming readings and events, as well as share some of the experiences we had while creating the novel together. Who knows? Maybe we can inspire other groups to keep the dugtungan tradition alive.

Thanks for reading. Check back soon!

~ Veronica