Filipina author brings Cordi culture to London
>> Tuesday, July 31, 2018
With new book, Bone Talk
Award-winning
UK-based Filipino author Candy Gourlay ignited Britain’s curiosity on
Cordillera culture with the launch of her new book, Bone Talk, during the 2018
Philippine Studies Conference at SOAS University of London on July 13.
Bone
Talk tells the story of Samkad and Little Luki who dream of becoming great
warriors. The adventure begins when the two friends meet a boy from the
lowlands who shares with them stories about the world and the people beyond
their mountain village.
“As
a young bookworm reading my way through my school library, I read many books
with historical settings: poor Oliver Twist, orphaned in Victorian London, Tom
Sawyer sneaking onto steam ships on the Mississippi River, kings and swords and
knights. But why was not a single book set in the Philippines where I grew up?
Why couldn't adventures spring from my history too? Bone Talk is my
attempt to fill this story gap. It's an adventure set right in the middle of a
cultural collision, when turn-of-the-century American soldiers encountered a
headhunting Filipino warrior people. What was it like to encounter the outside
world for the first time? What was it like to meet your invader and to realise
that everything you knew was about to change?” Gourlay explained her
inspiration for writing Bone Talk.
Readers,
writers, illustrators, publishers, and many of Gourlay’s avid fans gathered
from all over the United Kingdom to grab copies of Gourlay’s latest work.
“Just
read @candygourlay’s #BoneTalk in one sitting, couldn’t put it
down. It’s a mountain boy’s powerful and often violent adventure,
with graphic images that will stick with me for a long time. Makes
me want to learn more about the history of the Philippines,” British-American
illustrator and children’s books writer Sarah McIntyre gushed in social media.
Philippine
Ambassador Antonio Manuel Lagdameo, a staunch supporter of Philippine artists
in the United Kingdom, commended Gourlay on her latest work.
“Stories
build bridges of cultural understanding,” said Ambassador Lagdameo.
“Books and the stories they bear are some of the most effective ways by
which we can make Philippine culture and values resonate with the British
public.”
Manila-based
Filipino illustrator Kerby Rosanes designed the cover art of Bone Talk.
Gourlay’s
debut novel Tall Story, which was published in 2010, won the Crystal Kite
Award for Europe in 2011 and was shortlisted in at least 13 international
prizes. Shine, her second novel released in 2013 won the
Crystal Kite Award for the British Isles in 2014.
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