komikon 2013

Yikes, late post.

Well, as far as I can remember, the last Komikon I attended was the Summer Komikon held in my alma mater, UP, at the Bahay ng Alumni. I mentioned this to comics creator Paolo Fabregas and he said: “That was years ago!”

I know, dude. I know.

Why did it take me so long to return?

I am lazy. And I hate the heat. Really. I think you’d hate it too if you happened to meet me during the summer and I left a streak of sweat on your book.

And I don’t have a lot of cash. Sad face.

But, November is relatively cooler (relatively!), and I’m curious about the Bayanihan Center, and I have some books to sell, and I like the idea of attending the Komikon not just as a reader but as an author. With a seat behind a table! (Even though I don’t have a comic book!) And a free lunch! 

However, my face doesn’t scream Author. I sat behind the table and I think got more questions about Budjette’s and Manix’s books (“Magkano ‘to, ate?”) than autograph requests. I’ll stamp my name on my face next time. Haha! Kidding! (Or not?)

Then there were those who dropped my books as if they were infected when they learned that they were not comics, but prose. PROSE. GASP! How dare I bring prose to a comics convention?

Again, I joke. (Or not. I will remember your faces!)

I had fun. I really did. I talked about books with seatmates Paolo Fabregas and Carljoe Javier, and heard some inside scoop about book selling and book production from Carljoe and Ms. Nida. I sold out five copies of Unseen Moon in less than an hour. And my books were selling so well that they had to sell the browsing copy of Project 17. When I left, around 5 pm, there were only two copies left of A Bottle of Storm Clouds, including the browsing copy.

So thank you, readers, for making this author happy. And thank you to the ladies and gents of Visprint, as always.

Visprint @ Komikon 2013

Paolo Fabregas

Komikon 2013

I lined up to have stuff autographed by Rob Cham and Gerry Alanguilan, but I was too awkward to start a meaningful conversation with them. (I just left each of them a card. Uh. Hi po.)

Rob Cham

Rob Cham

My little loot, mostly comics from Carljoe’s Comic Book Writing class.

Komikon 2013

Next con: the Readercon! See you on Dec. 7!

Oh, and I’ll tell you a secret: I’m working on a comic book script! I have an outline, around 23 pages written, and I’ve contacted the artist. I want to finish it first. (I know some writers pass along script pages as they write – I can’t do that, I’ll break out in hives.)

I’m having fun, though I keep referring to the Internet to find the proper term to describe a scene. Memories of my Film 101 class!

Let’s see how it goes. I’m excited to see the words come to life as art.

komikon 2013 – come visit!

I will be at the 2013 Komikon this Saturday! And I will be giving away these cards to readers who will pick up/bring a copy of my books. :)

Photo

See you at the Visprint table!

Visit the Komikon page as well for Yolanda fundraising efforts.

 

November 16, 2013
10 am to 7pm
Bayanihan Center, Pasig City

Entrance Fee: Php 100 (Kids under 12 enter for free until 12 noon!)

We will be having several fund raising activities on Saturday. Check out http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/335098/scitech/gaming/komiks-and-comics-artists-rally-support-for-yolanda-victims

RSVP to the Official Facebook Event page –http://www.facebook.com/events/538191652905125/

For more info, visit: http://www.komikon.org/

How to get to the venue: http://www.komikon.org/map-to-bayanihan-center/

Old map, same venue

what is up

Some quick updates and recos:

what do readers want invitationv3

My name (and my likeness?) is on the poster! Very cool. My book is also featured in this LED Billboard ad that will be flashing along Katipunan in a few days!

Click here to pre-register for the Filipino Readercon, happening at the Rizal Library in ADMU on Nov. 9 (Saturday). Choose what panel you’d like to attend. Most of the panels are happening simultaneously, so get ready to bilocate.

Photo: "What Do Readers Want?" program, as of 18 Oct 2013.

Bring/buy a copy of my book and I’ll hand you one of these cards. :) You can use it as a bookmark.

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This set of cards from Moo UK has several designs, but this is my favorite.

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Also got this in the mail recently. I couldn’t find The Shining Girls in the bookstores or on Amazon Kindle, so I ordered a paperback from the Book Depository. If you have not heard of Lauren Beukes, do check out her earlier novels, Zoo City and Moxyland.

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I’m pretty sure you’ve heard of Aromateria‘s solid perfumes. Each scent, packaged in a  travel-friendly tube and priced at PhP 250, is named after a fictional character or author. My reader heart is happy.

Aromateria Solid Perfume Scents

I got Ender and Austen. Ender (stargazer lilies, sage, and white musk) is heady and earthy, while Austen (English tea rose, lavender, and patchouli) is fresh and bright, like a person who has just stepped out of the shower. Go to Aromateria’s site to order online, or find out what stores to visit to get a whiff of these babies. I seriously love them. (And I want more. Of course I do.)

Aromateria

We also found time to visit the Legaspi Sunday Market. Last time I had a roast turkey meal, and J grabbed himself some wagyu shawarma.

Legaspi Sunday Market

As well as this ginger ale. Yummeh.

Ginger Ale

J and I were just in Resorts World – Newport Mall, which held a weekend bazaar. Look at the cute earrings I found! I especially love the ampersand pair.

New earrings

And my sister shared this with me – a review of my novel, Project 17, in UST’s student publication, The Flame. Thank you Alvin Laqui!

downloadI have recently re-watched The Shining and Vanilla Sky, and watched Rosemary’s Baby. Halloween! And the nights and early mornings are now colder. (And by “colder” I mean not-30 degrees Celsius.) I love this season.

shiny, writerly things: visprint sale and promo, new estranghero press paperback

Currently nursing a swollen tonsil, which is decidedly not shiny.

In other news: books!

Every Saturday of October, Visprint (which is celebrating its anniversary – happy anniversary!) will be holding a warehouse sale in their office in Pasay City. Here’s the price list.

A Bottle of Storm Clouds (PhP132) and Project 17 (PhP 120) are both on sale. Both can also be found in bookstores. (Just Fully Booked for Project 17, but other bookstores will be carrying it soon.)

If you can’t make it to Pasay, Visprint can deliver the books to you for free. Prices will be based on SRP. No discount, but hey free shipping, and you don’t have to leave your home.

Like their Facebook page to get more updates.

UP Press is coming out with the third Estranghero Press book, Demons of the New Year. “Salot” first appeared in this anthology.

Look at this gorgeousness.

That’s it for now. I need to gargle with Bactidol.

‘project 17’ review up on rappler

Project 17 reviewed on Rappler. My thanks to Gabriela Lee for taking the time to write about it.

‘Project 17’ is one of a kind

BY GABRIELA LEE

MANILA, Philippines – Let’s face it: there’s not a lot of science fiction going around in Philippine literature.

It might be because, compared to neighboring countries or even the European Union and the United States, our scientific progress hasn’t really moved in the last 3 decades. Or perhaps, because of the lack of funding and opportunities, innovation and imagination don’t have a lot of space in the local scientific circles.

Or maybe it’s because we haven’t really tried — after all, people generally assume that science is hard, difficult and only smart people can understand science.

But in Eliza Victoria’s newest offering, “Project 17,” we are given a world in which the nitty-gritty lives of ordinary Filipinos are juxtaposed with a society where robots have taken over many of the service industries in Manila, including security, janitorial and even prostitution.

“Project 17″‘s Manila, specifically Hagonoy, Bulacan, is strangely familiar. [Ooh, one correction: Hagonoy is in the province of Bulacan in Central Luzon, which is not a part of Metro Manila. – EV] Everyone’s mobile phone is an extension of themselves, Twitter is still 140 characters in length and aggregates both social commentary and news tidbits, and massive pharmaceutical companies still control a large part of the population.

Of course, not everything is as it seems. Lillian is a babysitter, an outmoded role that is slowly being taken over by robots, and is trained in taking care of little children. However, when she is hired by a man named Paul to take care of his schizoaffective brother Caleb, Lillian discovers that beneath the gentrified facade of middle-class Manila that both men seem to project, there is a deeper, darker secret lurking beneath.

Read more.

I envisioned this science fiction novel as a quick, easy read. It’s true: we don’t have a lot of sci fi stories locally, and we don’t have a lot of novels that are written to entertain. “[The] narrative [follows] the familiar beats of action-adventure films”, says the review; this description makes me happy.

If this makes you curious, order the book from Visprint! Shipping is free. Direct orders will be taken until October only.

*

B Canapi also reviews Project 17 in his blog, Baliw na Baka, but it contains spoilers. Thank you for writing about it! Choice cuts, though:
Eliza Victoria has an engaging style of writing that hooks you from the first page onwards.  The book simply demands that you finish it in one sitting. It is entertaining and riveting, and Victoria manages to build up the world Lillian lives in without the use of too much exposition (A common pitfall too many writers fall for). Victoria is clear and concise with her vision of the semi-utopian Philippines the characters live in, and unlike most Sci-Fi works that seem to take it too far, this vision of the future is plausible and accessible, thus relatable.

PS: God, I can see this as a movie. Seriously.

Pakitawagan si Direk Erik Matti. Char. :)

congratulations to the winners of the project 17 giveaway contest

Yep – winners. 

Thank you to those who joined my giveaway! I decided to choose two winners instead of one, because I gave away two copies of my collection last year, and it’d be nice to do it again for this book.

I exported the file as CSV from WordPress’s Feedback form, and used an online random number generator to get the winning numbers:

2

1

I’m sure there’s a more elegant way to do this, but this is what I know.

And the winners are:

winners

Congratulations Lea Diño and Kat Sales! I will be sending each of you a signed copy via courier using the delivery address you left in the form.

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Thanks everyone for playing!

scenes from aklatan 2013

When Ms. Nida told her cadre (posse? army?) of writers that in lieu of WIT (Writers in Talks, Visprint’s annual event), Visprint would help put up a function (nameless at the time) that would bring together some local publishers, I had no idea how massive the event was going to be.

When Aklatan (aklat = book, it’s the Filipino word for ‘library’) was formally announced via press releases and a Facebook event page, I still had no idea what to expect. I have not been inside The Tents in Alphaland Southgate Mall; I did not know that it could house 600 people. By the afternoon of Sept. 7, Ms. Nida told me that the register had recorded 800 attendees, and people are still lining up to sign up.

It was beautiful insanity. Everyone involved in the event looked like zombies.

Here were the publishers at this year’s Aklatan:

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And here was the Aklatan host! We just had to take a picture with the beautiful Bebang Siy (It’s a Mens World):

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(My shirt says ‘Different is Nice’ – very non-confrontational.)

I got a bit lost (it was a huge venue, and there was another function room) and nearly arrived late at my own book launch.

The Visprint table inside The Tents was busy, as always.

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Launch inside the Balesin function room.

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So here’s where I fail with my photos. I forgot to turn off the Macro function! Argh. Forgive the blurriness. Kunwari na lang Instagram filter. Hehe.

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Books launched that day:

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Ma’am, hindi nakikinig o. Haha!

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Manix Abrera (Kikomachine Komix) attended my book launch, you guys. It’s my claim to fame.

Siege Malvar (Wakasang Wasak) brought a photobooth. We had our photos snapped before they folded up at lunch.

photobooth

After signing some books (thank you thank you thank you devoted readers!), we headed back to The Tents. It’s the Contemporary Writers’ Panel with Carlo Vergara (ZsaZsa Zaturnnah), Eros Atalia (Ligo Na U, Lapit Na Me), Ricky Lee (Si Amapola sa 65 na Kabanata), and Lourd De Veyra (Insectissimo!)

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Fangirl moment with Carlo V.

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Comic Book panel with Budjette Tan and Kajo Baldissimo (Trese), Paolo Fabregas (The Filipino Heroes League), and Manix.

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Signed more books! Here’s Manix sitting down and thinking, Hay hindi na naman ako makakapag-lunch.

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Went onstage myself for the Women Writers panel, with Prof. Jing Pantoja-Hidalgo (Catch A Falling Star), Nikki Alfar (Now, Then, and Elsewhen), Mookie Katigbak-Lacuesta (Burning Houses), and Mayette Bayuga (Halinghing sa Hatinggabi).

Photo by Joel Salud
Photo by Joel Salud

Went back to Balesin to listen to Flipside Publishing’s eKlatan, which featured talks about the local ebook industry.

Anthony de Luna, Flipside CEO.

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Adam David.

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Forgot to take a picture of A.S. Santos (she’s seated in the previous photos) but I really enjoyed her talk (which started with a ghost story – I love ghost stories). Go grab a copy of her book, Voices in the Theater.

Here’s my humble Aklatan loot. Buy my books so I can buy more books, please. Hee.

Aklatan loot

Do join my Project 17 giveaway! Till next year. :)

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Where to get my books:

Lower Myths (ebook): Amazon.com (MOBI) | Flipreads.com (Adobe DRM/EPUB) | iTunes (iOs) | Barnes & Noble (Nook Book) | Kobo (Adobe DRM/EPUB) | ilovebooks.com (iOs/Adobe DRM/EPUB)

The Viewless Dark (ebook): Amazon.com (MOBI) | Flipreads.com (Adobe DRM/EPUB) | Barnes & Noble (Nook Book) | Kobo (Adobe DRM/EPUB) | iTunes (iOs) | ilovebooks.com (iOs/Adobe DRM/EPUB)

A Bottle of Storm Clouds (ebook & print paperback): Amazon.com (MOBI) | Flipreads.com (DRM-free EPUB) | Kobo (DRM-free EPUB) |Weightless Books (DRM-free EPUB and MOBI) | iTunes (iOS) | Fully Booked | Bibliarch | Pandayan Bookshop | National Book Store | Powerbooks |and provincial outlets

Unseen Moon (ebook & print paperback): Smashwords ($0.99) | Amazon.com (MOBI) | Kobo (Adobe DRM/EPUB) and Sony Reader Store | POD, email victoriaeliza @ gmail dot com

Apocalypses (chapbook): POD, email victoriaeliza @ gmail dot com

Project 17: in bookstores soon