Saturday, April 26, 2014

[Book Review] Trash by Andy Mulligan (Spoilers included!)


"My name is Raphael Fernández and I am a dumpsite boy. People say to me, 'I guess you just never know what you'll find, sifting through rubbish! Maybe one day you'll find something nice.'

Then one day I did.

Okay so I've had this book since the beginning of April, and I didn't have any time to open it from its plastic let alone read it until now. I was actually looking around in the bookstore and I had to say this gem caught my eye. Why? 

Well, first of all, it had the big letters spelling "TRASH" on it (which still makes me giggle when I try to tell anyone "Right now I'm reading Trash."). Second, it was in the middle of books such as the House of Night series and the Blue Bloods series (I love House of Night but I haven't read/ have no inclination to read Blue Bloods though), and finding a green book in the middle of black, and painfully obvious YA books isn't going to be so hard. 

So, anyway, I was intrigued by it and started reading it (while waiting for the book signing event to commence).

And let me just say that it is one hell of a book (in a positive sense).

I mean, yes, I moved with Gardo, and Raphael, and Jun-Jun (Rat), and Sister Olivia, and Father Julliard. I cried internally when Rat stole money from Father Julliard's vault in the Missionary School to buy off Gabriel's Bible from Marco the (wretched) policeman. I cried internally when Rat took care of Pia Dante on the Day of the Dead. I winced and screamed internally when Raphael was being beaten by the police in their version of an 'interrogation'. I felt a cold sense of dread when I read about Jose Angelico buying Pia Dante's grave, only to sigh in relief when it was just a fake and Pia Dante was alive, sitting in front of her grave, albeit starving and too weak to walk.

What struck me most were, of course, the names of the people and the places, and the description of each place because they seem familiar. Raphael calls their home in Behala "Smoky Mountain" and, seeing as the book is set in a supposed 'Unnamed' Third World Country, of course one would think of the Smokey Mountain located in Manila, Philippines. Also, such names as Ermita and Buendia  were also used as places. Another proof is that the local currency seem to be in pesos (but there are Mexican pesos too so it's not much of a lead). Another is that the country supposedly has tourist attractions that are primary destinations for foreigners, but again it's not much of a lead.

What got me convinced was the dialogue between Rat and Father Julliard below:

'Sir po,' he (Rat) said. 'Sir po?' ... 'We are looking for something po.' 'Po,' by the way, is the word of respect people use here for the elders.

And bingo! Here's what I found out about Andy Mulligan, the author, at the back of the book:

Andy Mulligan... has taught English and drama in Britain, India, Brazil, and the Philippines. He now divides his time between London and Manila.

It's sad to think, though, that a foreigner noticed our social problems and did more than the people in the country ever did. In Trash, he talked of a country where people get paid living in the slums, people get paid for being poor, people rent out cement boxes for their dead loved ones for five years and if they can't pay these spaces get sledgehammered open. He talked about monetary extortion to both foreigners and locals. He stated corruption and graft. He showed that there is much to be confronted in the system, like ghost projects and making other countries stop endorsing programs to better the living conditions of everyone. Projects that could have made a difference in the society, even if it was small, yet politicians still siphon a bit here, a bit there, until everything is used up. Even the good intentions of everyone are being used to gain what they want - whatever it is. Money? Fame? Revenge? Everything. 

On my way home after I read the book, I looked at the streets and saw the poor, as I have seen them daily. Sleeping on streets, selling something, or walking around in large groups with oversized t-shirts or too-tight clothes. I see teenagers probably not much older than fourteen-year-old Gardo and Raphael, smoking and drinking. I see the elderly sitting down on dirty sidewalks, rattling old cup noodles containers for spare change. I see children younger than Pia Dante, barely clothed and counted by the dozens, either malnourished or bloated with disease. I see them crying, in the alleyways, by the sidewalk, down the road itself lying down on cardboard, with eyes either dead and hopeless or alert for something snatch-able.

And I tell myself, how odd for a not-so-popular book to suddenly enhance my view on society.



 
 

Monday, April 21, 2014

[Featured] The Fault In Our Stars Early Screening! #LittleInfinities



We all now that The Fault In Our Stars by John Green is an award-winning book. Right? Right.

We all know that the movie will premiere on June. Yes? Yes.

But what I just found out is that 20th Century Fox will be holding an early screening of the TFioS movie.

AN EARLY SCREENING OF THE TFIOS MOVIE.

If that doesn't excite you, I don't know WHAT will!

Sadly, the screening will be done on selected international places only (North America not included. Sorry guys!)

The places are the following:


                                                             Auckland, New Zealand

Makati City, Philippines
Stockholm, Sweden
Berlin, Germany
Copenhagen, Denmark
Milan, Italy
London, United Kingdom
Manchester, United Kingdom
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Dublin, Ireland
São Paulo, Brazil
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Santiago, Chile
Mexico City, Mexico


The screening will be done on the 10th, 11th, or 12th of May depending on the location.

20th Century Fox will be drawing entries at random. Winner gets two tickets to the TFioS early screening.

For more information:


Additional information and instructions are in the registration page.

Okay? Okay.

#littleinfinities



Sunday, April 20, 2014

[Book Review] Paper Towns by John Green (Spoilers Included!)

from johngreenbooks.com


It gives me a feeling that I'm reading something the author of "Looking for Alaska" would write (which is true). It has similar keypoints (with Margo Roth Spiegelman, Alaska, them being the narrator's ideal girl, their mysterious disappearance around halfway of the book (the first quarter of the book in the case of Margo) and the journey the narrator takes in finding them (which takes up the bulk of the book).)

However, Paper Towns riles me up in a way Looking for Alaska couldn't, which is favorable to the former. Paper Towns makes me move with the narrator, Quentin Jacobsen, as his search for his overly-eccentric, misunderstood dream girl dead ends turn after turn after turn. The writing itself makes me hope with Q as he gets seemingly good leads, and I read faster, unable to contain my excitement to finally - finally - at least have a clue to where Margo was. It also makes my chest constrict whenever Q would realize it's a dead end, and he'd pore over "Leaves of Grass" again, trying to make sense of Walt Whitman's obscure poetry and look for a clue left behind by M.R.S. with her dual highlighters. 

It's not just a search for Margo Roth Spiegelman, though, but it's also a search for truth, in a way. Quentin is looking for Margo because of love and curiosity and worry, but he encounters truth about himself and others along the way. Like that he expects everyone else (Ben and Radar) to be like him (pointed out by Radar). Also that everyone sees everyone else differently ("Ben's Margo, Lacey's Margo, Mrs. Spiegelman's Margo, my Margo"). Another is the obvious overlooking of anyone else's problems (like Gus the SunTrust security guard and Lacey Pemberton overlooking Margo's obsession with staying and scribbling in her little black notebook). Or even how one can only be true to him/herself when alone (Margo owning thousands of vinyl records but never telling anyone she liked music).

Quentin might be a senior but his mindset toward Margo is similar to back when they were children - he'd expect Margo to be something extraordinary like the Margo he'd always dream about and love about and crazed over since they were ten. But the truth is that Margo wouldn't want anyone to think of her as such. If I were Margo, I'd be tired of everyone looking at me like a trophy or someone to be depended upon when in fact I'm also a person, prone to failure and breakdowns. Perhaps that's why she ran away. Perhaps all her little clues and games of running away was a message that "I am done with this world. Leave me be for just a small amount of time while I break down. Because I know no one is going to help me but myself, so at least let me be alone."

But Margo isn't a problem child. She is not an attention-seeker with all her eccentricity. (Well... maybe just a bit.) But she's really showing a lot of sides of Margo Roth Spiegelman to Quentin because she does not want Quentin to think of Margo Roth Spiegelman one-sidedly. Why'd she choose him? Probably because she doesn't like her current friends (Becca and Jase, for example) and would rather show all of Margo to someone who knew a part of the real her (even if briefly), and that's where Quentin comes in. Quentin is who Margo expected "badassery" to come from, as she admitted in Agloe General Store by the end of the book. She admits that in her story in her little black notebook, Quentin Jacobsen exudes badassery in a way that Story Margo is captivated and Real Margo hopes she could make Real Quentin portray. 

But enough about Margo and Quentin for the moment. Let's talk about the great friendship between Quentin, Ben, and Radar, plus Lacey.

I mean, I could only DREAM of my friends skipping high school graduation for someone who means the world to me. Radar, who threw away his chance to lose his virginity to his girlfriend; Lacey and Ben and Quentin, who threw away high school graduation for their friend. It's a lot to handle, and I must admit, given the same situation, I would not have (pardon my French) the balls to skip high school graduation for a seemingly impossible lead.

All in all, I enjoyed this book much more than Looking for Alaska. Although there are some gaping holes I'd want closed (like how Quentin would pay back Lacey's parents, or how Ben, Radar, and Lacey would explain to their parents, or who the gigantic land whale slash cow belonged to), I think "Ah, screw it. It's a John Green book." And honestly, I couldn't have expected any less.