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[Group Events] F2F41 | Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz | May 23 2015, Saturday, 11am-2pm | Venue: Milky Way Cafe 928 Pasay Road (A. Arnaiz Ave.), Makati City

Top Ten ALL TIME Favorite Authors
(no particular order, but nevertheless they're at the top ten!)
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1 China Miéville - (view spoiler)
2 Kazuo Ishiguro - (view spoiler)
3 Ian McEwan - (view spoiler)
4 J.K. Rowling - (view spoiler)
5 Rainbow Rowell - (view spoiler)
6 David Mitchell - (view spoiler)
7 Gerry Alanguilan - (view spoiler)
8 K.A. Applegate - (view spoiler)
9 George Saunders - (view spoiler)
10 George R.R. Martin - (view spoiler)

1. Neil Gaiman (view spoiler)
2. George Saunders (view spoiler)
3. David Mitchell (view spoiler)
4. J.K. Rowling (view spoiler)
5. Suzanne Collins (view spoiler)
6. China Mieville (view spoiler)
7. Orson Scott Card (view spoiler)
8. Tim Kreider (view spoiler)
9. Jessica Zafra (view spoiler)
10. Nick Hornby (view spoiler)

(in no particular order)
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1. Mitch Albom (view spoiler)
2. Gabrielle Zevin (view spoiler)
3. Stephanie Perkins (view spoiler)
4. Suzanne Collins (view spoiler)
5. Cecilia Ahern (view spoiler)
6. Manix Abrera (view spoiler)
7. Budjette Tan (view spoiler)
8. Mina Esguerra (view spoiler)
9. Eliza Victoria (view spoiler)
10. Dean Alfar (view spoiler)

Top Ten Tuesdays (view spoiler)
April 21: Top Ten ALL TIME Favorite Authors
Well this is a hard question! Almost like asking us to list our top 10 favorite books of all time! :P But when I sat down and thought about it, it's really not too hard because the way for me to determine if the author is a favorite is if I have read all (or almost all) of the books they came out with, and I still liked them. I don't have to love all of them, but because I trust the author, one not-so-good book will not change the fact that I will still read the rest of what they come out with. These are my auto-buy authors, the ones whose books I will buy and read, no matter what. :)
So here are my Top 10 favorite authors of all time, across the genres I usually read:
1. Melina Marchetta
Recommended books: On the Jellicoe Road, Saving Francesca
The best thing about Melina Marchetta, IMHO, is not her main character or her lead interest, but her secondary characters. It's a given that main characters have to be fleshed out, but I think it takes a special skill for secondary, supporting characters to be as fleshed out, too. I love Marchetta friendships - they bring so much life in her books, and they remind us readers that life is not bad when you have friends with you. On top of all that, her contemporary YA novels have a kind of depth that deals with issues in a realistic manner that it's hard not to fall in love (or get your heart broken!) with the stories that she weaves.
2. Sarah Dessen
Recommended books: The Truth About Forever, This Lullaby, The Moon and More
Sarah Dessen is a comfort read. Some may say she's formulaic (and yes, she is, when you've read all of her works), but her stories bring about a comfort that keeps people returning to her fictional towns. Reading her makes you want to curl up with a book by the beach, or visit a diner and be friends with the characters. (New book coming out by May! :D)
3. Jasper Fforde
Recommended books: The Eyre Affair, The Last Dragonslayer, Shades of Grey: The Road to High Saffron
It's hard to describe Jasper Fforde's books because his books are outrageous in so many ways. He writes about a woman who can get in books and polices fiction, a detective that solves nursery crimes (who killed Humpy Dumpty?), a young teen prophesied to be a dragon slayer except there are no known dragons around, and a world where color heirarchy rules. Sometimes crazy, but always crazy fun, Jasper Fforde provides readers a romp into alternate history and comic fantasy that leaves you wanting for more. :)
4. Mira Grant
Recommended books: Feed trilogy
I'm not super knowledgable with science fiction, but if there's a sci-fi author I would automatically read, it's Mira Grant. Her Newsflesh trilogy is one of the best zombie/post-apocalyptic series out there, and she packs her books with a whole lot of research that makes everything so chillingly true.
5. Frank E. Peretti
Recommended books: This Present Darkness, Piercing the Darkness, The Oath
Frank E. Peretti is the father of Christian fiction, IMHO. :D His Darkness duology has some of the best angels + demons spiritual warfare fictionalization, and he has this way of writing stories that seep into your consciousness, and leaves you thinking about the spiritual world.
6. Shauna Niequist
Recommended books: Cold Tangerines: Celebrating the Extraordinary Nature of Everyday Life, Bittersweet: Thoughts on Change, Grace, and Learning the Hard Way
Falling Together
Shauna Niequist talks about life and family and friends and love and food. She also talks about brokenness, sadness, and the struggles of being a person living in this broken world. I love how her books feel like a balm to the weary soul, and how she reinforces the truths that we all know in the same way a friend lovingly reminds you of the important things that we miss in the midst of the madness of life.
7. Marisa De Los Santos
Recommended books: Love Walked In, Belong to Me, Falling Together
Marisa De Los Santos has a way with writing that makes you sigh (view spoiler) . She writes about love and friendship and love that comes from friendship, and all the ties that bind. She has a way with words that makes even the most mundane moments so poetic, and I would willingly read all the books that she comes out with. Bonus points: she always has Filipino characters in her books. :)
8. Tosca Lee
Recommended books: Demon: A Memoir, Havah: The Story of Eve, Iscariot
If you think that Bible stories are boring, Tosca takes them, explores their history and writes a book about it that makes you think more than twice about what really happened in the Bible. She doesn't write them to make you doubt, but really just to make you think - about the grandness of the grace of God, and the humanity that we have.
9. Sara Zarr
Recommended books: Once Was Lost, How to Save a Life
At first glance, Sara Zarr writes Issue Books. And in a way, she does, but the way she handles it is very graceful and realistic - sometimes too realistic that it actually hurts. Zarr is an expert at creating families and friendships with complications, and untying those complications one by one to show that there's always, always hope. :)
10. Mina V. Esguerra
Recommended books: Fairy Tale Fail, Interim Goddess of Love
The Queen of Filipino Romance, yes? :D Mina champions the local romance industry (which I am also technically a part of now), and she does it by producing more and more books that cater to the Filipino taste...and then some. From sweet and fluffy to steamy and sexy, Mina has it all. Take your pick. :)

MAWI LET'S TALK ABOUT THE LIFE MANUAL!!! ahahahaha
Tapos yung Jojo Moyes rin, hahaha. I believe lukewarm feels lang ito ke Monique pero feels fever rin ahahahahha

So anyway, here's my top ten favorite authors (in alphabetical order):
Jane Austen(view spoiler)
Ray Bradbury(view spoiler)
Anton Chekhov(view spoiler)
Arthur Conan Doyle(view spoiler)
Franz Kafka(view spoiler)
Gabriel Garcia Marquez(view spoiler)
Vladimir Nabokov(view spoiler)
Ambeth Ocampo(view spoiler)
Tony Perez(view spoiler)
J.R.R. Tolkien(view spoiler)

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1. Douglas Adams : the one thing the scientists are certain is that space is very vast. Just imagine traveling in its vastness. It would be boring, no wonder there are too many horror films about this. This is not the case in Adams' version of space. The next frontier is hip and funny in a British kind of way. There are aliens, talking doors, a pessimistic robot even poetry. One guarantee, reading his most famous trilogy (5 books really) would actually change your perception of your towel. If you must know, there is such a thing as a World Towel Day.
2. Haruki Murakami : I found him while I was making sense of my dream and living my reality. Let me change that, I think he found me following footsteps of ordinary people who thought they had ordinary lives until a cat talked. But that is just in one book. After reading him, I have learned to appreciate Jazz, loved cats and craved for pasta, these are recurring things in his novels but what really got me is the thought that even loneliness loves a company.
3. Orson Scott Card : there comes a time when you read a character that you will root for, that one person whose feats you praise and blemishes you forgive and for once, it was not about the looks. You could not afford to hate him, especially if this character is but a child.
4. Ursula K. LeGuin : i have heard of her reputation before I picked up her book. I have but one regret, why only now did I start to read her works? Lending my friend, Emir's review (because he captured my thoughts exactly) "An orphan goes to a school of Wizards. He is inextricably linked to his enemy, a shadowy 'non-being', who, at their first meeting, scarred his face. He's fond of his best friend's sister. He battles things, and himself, mainly.
He is not named Harry."
5. Agatha Christie : I am a fan of Cluedo. If this were the board game, my bets would be on Agatha to make the most interesting twist on who the killer would be
and which is his/her weapon of choice. Chances are, I might not get the right suspect until I am on the last part. But then again, I have read her almost 2 decades ago, I wonder if my detective abilities are now better.
6. John Green : there are great stories and there are greater storytellers. He is that storyteller that I find comfortable to read. It brings that all too familiar vibe of talking with your best friend, like his story happened with you in it.
7. Italo Calvino : he begins a movement that involves you to think whether to be with him or just hate him, but often when you least thought about it, you go back, almost curious what would happen next. I find his short stories more forgiving though.
8. Ryunosoke Akutagawa : it does not need to be in the same century to be able to understand his writings. His wit is enough for you to read him, his intrigues will make you want more. And right then and there, I was hooked but at the same time sad, knowing I am centuries too late to ask for his autograph.
9. Edgar Samar : I confess, I do not read as much Filipino writing as I should be. But when I do find a writer I love to read, I share him, celebrate him and push him(book push that is). When I first read him, I dare not put the book down because I do not want the conversation to be over but dread that it had to end because it did not come as a sequel because I do not like the word "end".
10. Eliza Victoria : i am new to speculative fiction. Although I have read Dean Alfar first before her, It was her stories that got to me. I started reading her short stories but have not finished it for one reason, because I came from the province and have a swing in front of our house things just seemed to hit so close to home. She makes your imagination run wild, in my case wilder than it should be.


Pwedeng recent :) Throwback pa din un, IMO.


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Because I have summer photos but actually, not really on the specified "Summer months". After all, our country is summer all year round~~
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASEPLEASEPLEASEPLEASE PLITH!

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Throwback Thursdays
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Throwback Thursday / Flashback Friday
TA-DAH!!!
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Hindi required. I will work on the assumption that the pictures you guys will post, kasama kayo dun sa summer adventure na un.
:)

Because I have summer photos but actually, not really on ..."
Summertime natin, baklush. Aarte ka pa. Hahahaha! ;)

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[spoilers removed]Throwback Thursdays
This was my last/most recent (but not really) "YOLO" trip with friends. I can't remember if that was in Siquijor or Dumaguete..."
You can post more than 1 photo, but the first photo would have to be your official entry for this activity. =)




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Ella!!! Life Manual!! (view spoiler)

I can speak Bisaya, which they can understand, but some of them responded in Waray XD

I can speak Bisaya, which they can understand, but some of them responded in Waray XD"
Haha. I see.

I am actually into solo trippin on the first weekend of July and I cannot wait. Baka makitulog / makihitch / kung anuman ahahahaha
Blue wrote: "I can speak Bisaya, which they can understand, but some of them responded in Waray XD"
I AM ENVIOUS THAT YOU GUYS SPEAK YOUR DIALECT WHILE ALL THE TIME IN MY SOLO-BACKPACKING EXPERIENCE I JUST UNDERSTAND THEM THRU CONTEXT CLUES. #icapslockparaintense ahahaha
I remember solo-backpackin Visayas (Panay and Negros specifically) and all the sights are awesomesause aheheh


And ferry to Iloilo, after? :D

Leggo TFG-Visayas edition!!! :D

Come to think of it, pweden balikan ang Siquijor. :)
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April 21: Top Ten ALL TIME Favorite Authors
I did not include author accomplishments, I merely write what I ♥ about them instead. :)
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1. Kathleen E. Woodiwiss – She’s the one who made me fall in love again, and again. Her words are a like butter on my tongue. I never get tired rereading her.
2. James Patterson – He doesn’t merely write about crime, he writes about people. His writing will sometimes left you cold and goose bumped, but will keep you turning the pages. His short-chapter trademark always leaves the reader on tenterhooks.
3. Neil Gaiman – I love the emotions he puts into writing. And for his diligence in keeping fairy tale in its true form.
4. Carlos Ruiz Zafon – For me, nobody knows Goth the way this writer does. His book are not merely dreamy, they are heavily laden.
5. Robert Fulghum – This guy knows life, and he has some really good sense on how we should live and value it.
6. C.S. Harris – History is never boring with her. Her knowledge of European history and eloquent writing is just too sumptuous to behold. That is why I am so addicted with the Sebastian St. Cyr series.
7. Susan Cooper – She will always be my Queen of Fantasy. She who first wrote about an 11-yr old boy who was born to fight off evil. She who wrote that being the greatest means having/choosing best friends to fight along you, no matter what.
8. J. K. Rowling – I will forever be grateful to her for making Harry Potter “the boy who lived.”
9. Paul Auster – The psych he demands from every reading of his works is like a slow sex. It is utterly consuming.
10. China Mieville – He’s a genius, unbelievably and frightfully so. He can write a whole new world seamlessly according to his purpose.
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