Reviving Old Projects

Recently I went back to grad school and my classmates found out about what I write. After a bit of encouragement, I’ve decided to spend some free time (when not bogged down with assignments and thesis preparations) to review and revise an old story that I blazed twelve chapters into back in 2006 – A… View Article
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Nov 13, 2024
Reviving Old Projects
Recently I went back to grad school and my classmates found out about what I write. After a bit of encouragement, I’ve decided to spend some free time (when not bogged down with assignments and thesis preparations) to review and revise an old story that I blazed twelve chapters into back in 2006 – A… View Article
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Jun 12, 2024
Philippine Independence
Every 12th of June, crowds mass at Luneta Park around the tallest flagpole in the country (if I recall my facts correctly). The Philippine flag, a massive thing, is raised there, and it is an inspiring sight. I wasn’t there today, but my friends were. And my heart was there, or in spirit they say…. View Article
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Aug 26, 2023
How to Recharge
When I’ve been staring at a screen for too long, it helps me to close my laptop and focus on something else for a while. Something that makes my hands move in ways besides typing. Rest my brain a little but exercise a different part of it with a puzzle or an art project. Or… View Article
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Aug 25, 2023
Multitasking
If you try to go in too many directions at once, you go nowhere. But somehow, I don’t mind multitasking my writing projects. When I clock out of work, hopefully work won’t follow me home. Hopefully, I can focus on finishing something I started writing some time back. I juggle a few such projects right… View Article
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Aug 24, 2023
Encouraging Art to Thrive
Recently, two of my artist friends had problems, which I was able to help by patronizing their art. One is a brilliant painter who needed to find a new home for her masterpieces. The other, a teenager with a knack for illustration, needed to go back to high school to finish school and get her… View Article
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Aug 23, 2023
Projections for When Now Has Passed
In 2005 Memphis, I wrote an adventure set in 2024 Memphis. That’s SCRAMBLE. Back then, I figured 19 years into the future wouldn’t be too different… Boy did I not predict 2020. But in 2020 Africa, I started formulating the Samson’s Girl comics, about Elizabeth and Juliet Samson, set in 2040 Philippines, after LT Beth… View Article
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Aug 22, 2023
Setting of Memories
Whether Memphis, Manila, or Mindanao, setting has its special place in my stories. I try to feature landmarks and places of meaning to me. The backdrop to the action gives me opportunity for poetic descriptions, whether remembering the soft music and brown tones of the now-closed Figaro’s Cafe in Riverbanks Mall, Marikina, or the haunted… View Article
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Aug 21, 2023
SCRAMBLE – animation someday by Animake
I found an animator! OMG. He redid Bonni’s character design for anime style animation and this is the first look at her. Animake, a Filipino animator, happily took a go at redesigning the characters Myke Guisinga drew to prepare them for animation in the future. I am thrilled. Once he’s able to animate the story,… View Article
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Jul 01, 2023
SCRAMBLE – Poster by Myke Guisinga
So in the past year, I’ve been talking to artists to help make SCRAMBLE into an animation. That had a couple of steps. The first was character designs, which the talented Myke Guisinga, a professional and freelance comic book artist, readily crafted while I searched high and low for an animator. When Myke was done… View Article
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Jan 26, 2023
Travel in 2023
So this year, I’ve decided to travel more of the Philippines, starting with the far-flung locales of my future graphic novel. I’m still not done with world-building, of the future in 17 years time. But its an exciting new endeavor – travel again as the pandemic subsides, and see what is out there… Elizabeth and… View Article
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Oct 23, 2022
Paper Phoenix
About a decade ago, I wrote the worst story I have ever written. It was a tough sem. I failed nearly all my classes except for a foreign language and this one creative writing workshop class. The story made no sense but I submit it anyways. The most interesting character was a side character, and… View Article
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Oct 20, 2022
Swimming in Research
My day job can really distract me from what I want to write… But I find research to be positively delightful. Scouring libraries and news websites for data. Using sticky tabs to mark every relevant page, writing colorful sticky squares of summarized data… Color coding my research. It is absolute fun. And as midnight nears… View Article
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Oct 19, 2022
That Sense of Destiny
I have a few stories, still unfinished, that have to do with a sense of destiny – not for a specific character, but for humanity as a whole or for some large chunk of human kind…  Like what happens to the fate of all Filipinos in the Middle East when one young man goes there… View Article
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Oct 18, 2022
Genre Choice
I usually prefer to write science fiction and fantasy, with teenage or college age protagonists. Roaring adventures. But there have been exceptions to that. Among my unfinished manuscripts are two or three horror stories, and maybe a tragedy or so. Horror isn’t really my genre… I find myself allergic to movies on it. Too easily… View Article
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Oct 17, 2022
Dreams and the Results
When I was younger, I imagined I’d be married with kids by the age of 28. I imagined that I’d be a novelist, and my husband would keep the kids out of my study while I write my novels. That didn’t happen. I’m in my mid-30s now, and I have yet to find that kind… View Article
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Oct 16, 2022
Reservoirs
Over a week ago, I was writing about how blogging kept cabin fever away. And again, I was unable to write for a few days… yet a reservoir of blog posts, written in advance, got me through that. Similarly, I’ll need a reservoir of chapters if I am to publish a webnovel later on, parallel… View Article
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Oct 15, 2022
Writing Breaks
As this is posted, I’m probably already back at work. But as I write this, I’m on what is likely my last week of vacation, sick leave after recovering from a surgery. This isn’t the first time I’ve taken a break from work to write. I find it helpful. Back around 2014, when I shifted… View Article
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Oct 14, 2022
Targets and Endgoals
What is my purpose? My target? My end goal when I write and hope to publish? A library. A school. Someday, I hope to earn enough to start an international school with no tuition fee for impoverished students in the Philippines, or who hail from the Philippines in any way. Starting a school is a… View Article
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Oct 13, 2022
Why I don’t write fanfiction
When I was little, I’d imagine myself into X-Files or Star Trek, but that only lasted until I learned about copyrights. Weirdly, despite its popularity, I’ve never really written fanfiction. I may have role played in it with others via text based mediums, but I haven’t tried to story it the same way I do… View Article
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Oct 12, 2022
What shall I web novel?
My friends who are successfully e-published authors encouraged me to do what I did back in high school, but more seriously this time – they invited me to publish some stories for free via websites that have replaced FictionPress in the decades since. These are Wattpad, Royal Road, and Tapas (the last one is for… View Article
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Oct 11, 2022
On Writing for Web Novels: Wordcount
So the other day, my successful web novel author friends gave me some advice. And I’m sharing that with y’all. Works that are published online for free can be monetized through Patreon (avid readers can read chapters in advance – its simple enough) but not all stories will work in this format. Web novels require… View Article
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Oct 10, 2022
On Writing for Webnovels: POV
So the other day my successful web novel author friends came by for coffee, and to take a look at my novel manuscript (YAY!). I was able to ask them for advice, and learn more about how e-publishing via free websites works. A web novel generally requires consistent updates – multiple times a week, or… View Article
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Oct 09, 2022
Exploring Webnovels
Recently I met with friends who are now successful e-book writers. Together they publish a web novel, five chapters every week, with weeks worth of chapters in advance available on their Patreon. For them, this is a full-time endeavor, but it supports their family. I can’t write full-time, but to some extent they invited me… View Article
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Oct 08, 2022
The Writer’s Tools – A Sword!
A writer, especially an action or adventure writer, needs to have a sword and know how to use it, in my opinion. How can you write a fight scene realistically if you don’t know how to fight? 😀 Featured in this photo is a Bohol Blades Ginunting, the sword of any arnisador. I’m sure my… View Article
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Oct 07, 2022
The Writer’s Tools – A Pen
In the picture are five fountain pens quite dear to me, and commonly used prior to the pandemic. I need to clean them. But I know when I do, and refill them with ink, they will write splendidly. Yesterday, I wrote of the journals I use. Today – pens! A caveat – due to current… View Article
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Oct 06, 2022
The Writer’s Tools – A Journal
Every writer needs something to write on, I suppose. And notebooks and journals beat loose pieces of paper that get lost along the way. So I figured I’d write about my favorite journals, and where to find them. In the photo are three journals I’ve used over the years. One is for my fiction characters,… View Article
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Oct 05, 2022
The Comfort of Cats as Company
Meow. I write, flanked by two furry donuts that twitch gently as they dream of the world beyond my home. They entertain and comfort. They bring joy. Cats have always been my preferred pet. I don’t have to walk them twice a day, I don’t have to wrap my hand in a plastic bag to… View Article
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Oct 04, 2022
A Vice that Harms None: Comic Books
When dad died in 2018, grief hit like a freight train. I coped by diving into the Marvel multiverse of comics. It helped a ton. I don’t collect comic books to resell them. The focus on financial gain has always turned me off ever since mom valued money as more important than her own children…. View Article
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Oct 03, 2022
Going back to grief
Just after my post on grief… A pillar of UP Diliman ROTC passed away at a surprisingly young age. He helped me with some of my college endeavors, and only raised an eyebrow if my projects ever wandered near the edge of trouble for some reason or another. But he provided much guidance. For one… View Article
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Oct 02, 2022
The Gravity of Grief
Over four years ago, my dad died. Grief struck like a freight train and I’d sleep for most of the day while someone I thought I could trust took care of the arrangements. (Quick fact – I shouldn’t have trusted him, but that’s another story). Dad was the one who guided and supported me, all… View Article
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Oct 01, 2022
The Want for a Day Job
There was a time when my dad passed away, and we sold his massive house in the States and moved the family back to the Philippines. Cheaper living here. I could’ve quit my day job then. Maybe I should’ve. But I chose, back then, not to be a full-time novelist. I chose that for a… View Article
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Sep 30, 2022
The Need for a Day Job
So I’ve only been able to blog every day for the past four weeks (more or less) because I’m recovering from surgery and have a rare long vacation from my day job. But why, if I’m enjoying this leisurely and restful recovery heaven would I want to go back to my day job if I… View Article
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Sep 29, 2022
A Blog Every Day Keeps Cabin Fever Away
Four weeks ago, I had a surgery. When I came home from the hospital, I started this website and I’ve made it a goal to blog every day I’m on vacation since. It helped me a lot. Four weeks later, I’m only starting to feel a little bit of cabin fever. Four weeks later, I’m… View Article
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Sep 28, 2022
Chimera Anamnesis Update
So I’ve been reviewing my 280 page manuscript since I have a personal goal to ship it off to the publisher by the first week of October. I read it all in three days, with breaks of course. Most of what I’ve read so far has been a blast. I’m optimistic. One chase scene made… View Article
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Sep 27, 2022
A Lesson from Lolo: Enjoy Fiction
My grandfather was also an avid reader. Poverty could not hold him back in his youth – libraries helped him access knowledge he could not otherwise afford. He graduated valedictorian and later rose the ranks thanks to his constant reading. But in his old age, he shared one piece of wisdom. For all the books… View Article
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Sep 26, 2022
The Truth is Out There
I was five years old when X-Files came out. Every Friday night, my dad would sit down on the living room sofa to watch it. I’d sit on the floor, leaning my back against the sofa, and watch it beside him. For several years, it went like this. I saw the stuff of nightmares and… View Article
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Sep 25, 2022
Lessons from dad: File it away
Dad always told me to ‘write it down’ when I ran to him with a story idea. And because of that, I had a ton of paper throughout high school with all these story ideas written down. The next lesson was through example and never spoken: File it away. Dad always bought extra school and… View Article
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Sep 24, 2022
Lessons from dad: Write it down
When I was little, I’d often run to my dad, excited, with a story bursting in my mind that I wanted to share. He’d usually be at his architect’s table at home, drawing something or reading, and he’d stop me right there. “Write it down.” That was the first of two lessons dad taught me…. View Article
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Sep 23, 2022
Trying not to crash the ending
The other day, I was rereading my first novel manuscript – Hunting the Rememberer: Chimera Anamnesis. In 2013, the ending I wrote made me roll my eyes and facepalm. Now, the ending I wrote in 2021 made me scream and squeal as multiple plot threads were tied off in a single, action-packed chapter. Goodbye, summary… View Article
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Sep 22, 2022
A Summary or a Story?
Over a decade ago, sometime around high school and before I started studying creative writing more seriously, I had a bad habit of writing a summary as a short story or a chapter. I knew an entire universe, and I tried writing it out as a book with eight chapters. It did not go well…. View Article
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Sep 21, 2022
MOOs, MUDs, and the wonders of TELNET as descriptive practice
In high school, dad gave me a secondhand laptop. It had a crappy graphics card that prevented me from playing any 3d games. World of Warcraft was out of the question. So I found another avenue for entertainment – text based role playing games. TELNET Multi-User Dungeons (MUDs) and MUDs Object-Oriented(MOOs) are old programs that… View Article
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Sep 20, 2022
Vylron – an Isekai Adventure
So recently a friend posted a lesser-known song by Avenged Sevenfold saying it would be a great end credits song for an isekai adventure. Isekai is a Japanese word that refers to a portal adventure, like Alice in Wonderland, or Gate. In it, the main character(s) are transported via portal to another world or dimension… View Article
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Sep 19, 2022
John Hopkins University Center for Talented Youth
When I was in fifth grade, there were a slew of standardized tests that I did very well in. The end result was that I got to join a summer camp which had a creative writing workshop for kids. If any program contributed to my creativity as a child, this was it.  For a few… View Article
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Sep 18, 2022
Comics & Windblown from Sebardine
Exploring Patreon has made me consider – what do I want to make? I want to create and publish stories (novels), comics, and animations. But can I make comics? I checked my sketchpad and found something from high school. Another extracurricular project about my high school barkada. It was meant to be a written story… View Article
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Sep 17, 2022
Exploring How to Fund an Animation
SCRAMBLE is a six episode series. Each episode should be about 15 minutes long… And it takes $1,000 USD to animate a one-minute clip in the Philippines. I checked with multiple options. That is the price. Since I know my doodles of my characters aren’t detailed or consistent enough to pass muster (see Bonni, right,… View Article
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Sep 16, 2022
Writer Fuel
I used to drink 20+ cups of 3-in-1 coffee back when I was a workaholic in north Africa. From 8am to 12mn for weeks, I’d tackle mountains of work. When I crossed a border and had their strong, strong, little lattes, I drank a lot less. Maybe 2-4 cups a day there, even at night…. View Article
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Sep 15, 2022
The Story Behind SCRAMBLE
In the summer of 2005, my barkada and I decided to make a short film project. Consisting of six, fifteen-minute episodes, SCRAMBLE was originally supposed to be a group effort. Sarge, Danny, David, Michael, Justin, and me, and a few others whose names I have to dig up were the team for this.  My high school savings… View Article
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Sep 14, 2022
The Person I Love, Pure and Chaste from Afar
Francis gave me three writing prompts, and this is the third. But I think he’ll be disappointed, as the only person I’ve ever written love letters to is a country. My dearest Philippines.  As a teenager in high school, when I discovered my love of country… It was funny. I was in the US, but… View Article
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Sep 13, 2022
A Secret I Have That Others Don’t Understand
Francis gave me a writing prompt for my blog, so I’m running with it (with an edit). People don’t understand why I left America. But it’s more than that. Why did I come home to the Philippines? When I phrase it like that, maybe you’ll understand. But when SO MUCH of the Philippine population dreams… View Article
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Sep 12, 2022
The Happy Place I Can’t Admit to Everyone Else
I asked my friends for blog writing prompts, and Francis gave me three! 😮 So I’ll start with this one: The Happy Place I Can’t Admit to Everyone Else. Have you ever seen Jaime Nepomuceno’s sculpture at GSIS in Pasay City? The one entitled “In Dreams We Fly” – I swear when I saw it,… View Article
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Sep 11, 2022
21 Years and an Ocean Crossing
September 11, 2001. I was in Memphis, Tennessee, in middle school at the time. When the towers fell, all the boys in my class stood up and said they’d join the army or the navy or whatever, just they’d fight for their country because of it. And some of the girls there said similar, though… View Article
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Sep 10, 2022
Two Views on Sensitivity Reading
A year or two ago, I paid a sensitivity reader to check a chapter I was worried needed a trigger warning. Her feedback was that it was atrocious, like the chapter needed to burn unless there was some way to turn back time and unwrite it. It was the only problematic chapter in the entire… View Article
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Sep 09, 2022
Headspace: How I Write
I requested a few friends to ask me questions I can answer in my blog while I recuperate for a month. My Malaysian-Japanese expat friend, Azman, asked what headspace I have when I write. So here goes. When I was six or seven years old, I decided to try writing my first ‘book’. All I… View Article
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Sep 08, 2022
Lockdown Writing Buddy
Around Feb/March 2020, I lived in a North African capital along the Mediterranean coast. For over 3 months, the whole country was in strict lockdown due to the pandemic. Only 3 things kept me going: a pair of kittens and my novel manuscript. I’d been working on this particular novel since June 2007. There were… View Article
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Sep 07, 2022
A Multilingual Children’s Book: Vylron
In 2000, as a twelve-year-old, I made a story universe called Vylron. Set in a post-Earth universe after alien interference, it transformed our planet into a fantastical world with dragon people, cat people, and elementals. My brother and the neighborhood kids and I played D&D-esque games set in Vylron, developing our characters and doodling stat… View Article
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Sep 06, 2022
Seeds of Inspiration
They say there are two kinds of writers: those who are gifted, and those who work really really hard to write something good. Since my youth, I was never really the latter. I’d catch a seed of inspiration and stories would burst onto the page as I scribbled or typed at high speed. The inspiration… View Article
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Sep 05, 2022
Progression as a Writer
I made the decision recently to post or rather repost my old work from high school, the stuff I published to Fiction Press back in 2005-2007. Side by side with my 2021 work, I can see differences in my style, how I’ve developed as a writer over the decades. The way I write an intro… View Article
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Sep 04, 2022
What happened?
So in 2020 I was stuck in North Africa during the pandemic, locked down in some shnazzy city with a laptop and some hard copies of my old  manuscripts to my first novel. I retyped the whole damn thing. All 60,000 plus words. And then my elbows  and hands started to go numb, all pins-and-needles… View Article
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Sep 03, 2020
The Smithsonian Museums
In the year 2000, I was a homeschooled twelve-year-old living just outside of Washington, D.C. That year, I made my story universe, which I write in to this day. In  terms of authors, I was propelled by C.S. Lewis, JRR Tolkien, and  Madeline L’engle. The worldbuilding, the fantasy, the science fiction.  The continuity of characters… View Article
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May 30, 2020
How I wrote 100 pages of novel in 2 weeks
Back  in 2013, I was in my final year at UP. I started the second semester  with 100 pages of novel – carefully workshopped pieces over the course  of six years of creative writing classes. But I also had a day job.  Thanks to exciting work, I sort of forgot that I had a thesis… View Article
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May 23, 2020
My favorite place to write in UP
Back  in the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman, I started Hunting the Rememberer: Chimera Anamnesis. On my first days at UP, I’d sit on  the steps outside the massive Main Library, and I’d eat my baon and  write the first pages of Chapter 1: Cala. It was fun to have lunch there  and write…. View Article
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May 17, 2020
Workshops
I  made the most of the workshop classes in UP during my college days. Every chance I got, I’d use a workshop to refine another chapter of my  novel. Only nonfiction, normal fiction, children’s stories, and graphic  novel were set outside of Chimera Anamnesis, but even then I still wrote  stories in a parallel universe… View Article
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May 16, 2020
Why I studied Creative Writing at UP
Back  in November 2007, I was an Anthropology student who’d taken a Creative  Writing elective under the late Professor Butch Guerrero. I’ve been able  to read since I was 2 1/2 years old, and devouring books outside my age  range since I was 6 or 7. I knew from a young age that I wanted… View Article
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May 10, 2020
Why I started Hunting the Rememberer: Chimera Anamnesis
It’s  been 13 years since I started my first novel (and I’m still writing  it). I just wanted to look back on why and how I started this.  Back in 2006, I made the  biggest move of my life: from the United States to the Philippines,  where my family is from. After a gap year… View Article
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May 09, 2020
Introduction
Hello  world! I’m Isabel Risone, a Filipina-American science fiction novelist  working on my first book. Here’s a little bit about me.  I was born and raised in the  United States to Filipino parents. After high school, I moved to the  Philippines and studied B.A. Creative Writing at the University of the  Philippines Diliman, in Quezon… View Article
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