coming soon from visprint: a bottle of storm clouds by eliza victoria

VISPRINT, Inc., publisher of Manix Abrera’s Kikomachine Komix series, the National Book Award-winning Trese series, and Bob Ong’s numerous books, has released a list of their upcoming titles. Exciting times ahead!

  • Tomb Keeper by G. M. Coronel (The prequel and sequel to his first horror novel, “Tragic Theater”.)
  • It’s Not That Complicated Bakit hindi pa sasakupin ng mga alien ang daigdig sa 2012 ni Eros Atalia
  • Kikomachine Komix Blg. 8 by Manix Abrera (Official release will be on this year’s Summer Komikon.)
  • A Bottle of Storm Clouds stories by Eliza Victoria
  • Mga Angst ng Isang Di-Mahapayang-Gatang ni Resty Cena

My poem, “Elegy for the corridors“, can now be read online on the Philippines Free Press website.

Also, Paolo Chikiamco links us to this review of Alternative Alamat by Jaymee Goh:

ALTERNATIVE ALAMAT
OK, if you only read one anthology all year, please let this one be it. I’d like to have this one in hardcopy, actually. Anyway. There’re a few appendices talking about mythology and researching / recording mythology in the Philippines. I wish there also had been a glossary of the deities featured in the stories, but they’re major deities, and it really is a “For Flipinos” sort of anthology in this way.

“Ana’s Little Pawnshop On Makiling St.”
This story is about Anagolay, now called Ana, told from the perspective of Eric, who finds himself employed by Ana in her little pawnshop, which she now runs, and sells the unclaimed things that appear in her closet. It’s a delightful magical realist sort of story, where the gods mingle with mortals, and Ana’s pawnshop is in the middle of a block owned by Mariang Makiling, another local goddess, who is now a stockholder. Ana doesn’t really need Eric around, but she gets a bit lonely, as gods probably would do, and so through Eric we get a glimpse into how the extraordinary meets the ordinary in different ways. Things come to a head when development happens. The story doesn’t really resolve itself, but there’s a bittersweet farewell, a gift that was foreshadowed. I just find this story utterly charming (“I’ve poured the nebulae here. They’ve been busy. Look how many stars they’ve made!”) and a wonderful start to the anthology in general. Re-reading it makes me smile.

Thank you for the kind words, Jaymee. :)  Read more.

sneak peek: lower myths by eliza victoria

I am proud and happy to announce that my two-novelette collection, Lower Myths, which won in the 2009 Pinoy Story Writing Contest for the Horror & Crime/Suspense category, will (very) soon be published as an ebook by Flipreads under Flipside Publishing Services.

Many thanks to Flipside VP and General Manager Honey de Peralta for approaching me about the possibility of partnering with them, Acquisitions Editor Kristine Reynaldo and Online Marketing Specialist Charles Tan for their invaluable comments on the manuscript, and Production Editor Adam David and his team for their work on the beautiful cover and interior art.

Let’s have some excerpts, shall we?

Continue reading sneak peek: lower myths by eliza victoria

sign of life: “needle rain” part 1 on philippine genre stories

Part 1 of my crime story, “Needle Rain“, is now up on Philippine Genre Stories.  Feel free to read and share!

better living through xeroxography 2

The Blinds issue of PANTAS, which features my poems “Notes” and “Architecture”, will be on sale at BLTX2 this Friday.

Better Living Through Xeroxography or BLTX is a small-press expo now on its second incarnation, the first one a success by indie standards: 30 small press publishers and 200 buyers on a rainy December day in 2010.

The goal of BLTX is simple. Bring together independent self-publishers from Metro Manila (hopefully from elsewhere, too), in a one-night event that will allow them to sell their wares: books, yes, but also zines and other printed materials like shirts, postcards, posters. It’s about selling, but also about meeting like-minded individuals who believe in literature and creative work that might not ever get into the mainstream of commercial bookstores and galleries, but for one night is the star of the show.

I’m not sure if I’ll be able to go, but if you’re in the area, do drop by okay?

Click here for details.

Sources: curiouscouch, speaking in hushed tones

PANTAS folio + The Cabinet + other publication news

Christian Tablazon, poet and educator, invited me late last year to submit poems to the literary folio, PANTAS. I’m happy to hear that two of my poems – “Architecture” from my collection Maps, and “Notes” from Reportage – will be appearing in its pages. The folio, Blinds: PANTAS Tomo IX, will be out next week!

You can now read “Architecture” on The Cabinet.

The Cabinet is a Laguna-based independent multimedia arts collective established in 2011 to foster emergent and liminal forms of storytelling and produce and distribute works that cater to the said principle.

Click here to view and “like” their Facebook page. Several pieces are already online for your perusal.

In other news: I’ll have two stories out by July. “The Mechanic” will be appearing in Kaleidotrope, while “Fairy Tales” will go live on Daily Science Fiction.

schedule of PGS Online stories

There will soon be a new set of stories from Philippine Genre Stories Online. Here’s the schedule (based on the email sent to us by PGS Editor Kenneth Yu):

Feb 16 – “Nardo” by Vince Torres

March 1 – “Last Stand at Ayala Center” by EK Gonzales

March 16 (part 1) and March 24 (part 2) – “Needle Rain” by Eliza Victoria

April 1 (part 1) and April 8 (part 2) – “Vinci’s Real-Life Pulp Fiction” by set editor Joseph Nacino

Mark your calendars!

While waiting for the stories, sit down, have a look around. And read.