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Nick Joaquin (1917–2004)

Auteur de The Woman Who Had Two Navels

73 oeuvres 788 utilisateurs 9 critiques 4 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Séries

Œuvres de Nick Joaquin

The Woman Who Had Two Navels (1975) 137 exemplaires
A Question of Heroes (2005) 71 exemplaires
Manila, my Manila (1999) 56 exemplaires
Cave and Shadows (1983) 50 exemplaires
Culture and History (First) (1988) 44 exemplaires
Tropical Gothic (1972) 35 exemplaires
Prose and Poems (1963) 27 exemplaires
Reportage on Lovers (1977) 25 exemplaires
Cándido's Apocalypse (2010) 17 exemplaires
The Philippines, a manifold land (1992) 7 exemplaires
May langit din ang mahirap (1998) 6 exemplaires
Intramuros (1988) 5 exemplaires
Reportage on Politics (1981) 4 exemplaires
Ed Angara: Seer of Sea And Sierra (2006) 4 exemplaires
Almanac for Manileños 3 exemplaires
The World of Rafael Salas (1987) 3 exemplaires
Going to Jerusalem 3 exemplaires
The ballad of the five battles (1981) 3 exemplaires
Collected verse (2017) 2 exemplaires
Doy Laurel : In Profile - (1985) 2 exemplaires
Question of Heroes 1 exemplaire
Hers, this grove 1 exemplaire
Selected stories 1 exemplaire
Reportage on politics 1 exemplaire
Super Salesgirl 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

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Membres

Critiques

The Manila of Nick Joaquin's time is very different from the Manila that I was born in. And yet, too often I could see myself in his sentences. There's my religious trauma, there's my adamant quest for freedom, and there is the intergenerational conflict that I grew up and still grapple with. It's true. Our generation and our parents' generation speak in different languages, literally.

My favorites from this collection:
The Order of Melkizedek - about the clash of traditional Catholic worldviews and alternative movements in a society heavily influenced by American counterculture
Cándido's Apocalypse - an ode to petit bourgeois parents and their "overacting" teenage children
The Mass of St. Sylvestre, Doña Geronima, May Day Eve - just fun tales that double as criticism of the church
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
kahell | May 4, 2022 |
It was a short and nice story about bitterness, passion and regret.
 
Signalé
krizia_lazaro | Feb 19, 2018 |
it is full of mysterious..
 
Signalé
Mhelay17 | 3 autres critiques | Nov 26, 2017 |
The book was a quick and easy read. It was a "nice" social commentary at first. The main character Bobby or Candido believes that he is better than other people like his parents, who are pretentious and as he would say "overacting". He sees these persons for who they really are or rather he sees what they really are (he sees them naked). Later it becomes about God, about finding God. I love how Nick Joaquin stressed the importance of people, love and God. No man is truly an island.

However, I believe that the story would be conveyed better in Filipino. Some words are lost in translation. If i misunderstood how a word is used I would translate the word in Filipino to truly understand what Nick Joaquin really wants to convey. He also likes run-on sentences thus sometimes I get so confused.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
krizia_lazaro | Mar 4, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
73
Membres
788
Popularité
#32,300
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
9
ISBN
52
Langues
2
Favoris
4

Tableaux et graphiques