Here's a bullet-points recap of points that struck me in the panels I managed to attend:
GANITO KAMI NOON: WRITING THROUGH THE DECADES. |MP3|
- Many of the writers came into fellowship by drinking.
- Conflict and rivalries are prevalent no matter what decade you belong to.
- There were a couple of friendly jabs at various universities.
- Common advice if you're planning on becoming wealthy through writing (whether it's novels, comics, movies, etc.): don't.
- Many writers have day jobs.
- Highly-paying sidelines authors take involves either writing/editing biographies or writing for politicians.
- Writers don't read contracts.
- Writers wish they had book agents here in the Philippines.
- Typical print-run of a book in Vietnam is 1,000 (same goes for here in the Philippines).
- Vietnamese haven't seen Miss Saigon.
- Royalties on Philippine books for authors tend to be 10~15%.
- Publishing for the gay niche in the Philippines is lucrative (ten reprints of Ladlad, publishers willing to take a risk on gay poetry but not on a regular poetry book).
- Jhoanna Cruz is a lesbian writer despite currently being married to a man!
- Jaime An Lim is part of several margins as he's a) Filipino-Chinese, b) gay, and c) considers his writing regional.
- Chick lit written by Filipinos made it to the best-seller lists in Singapore.
- Initial run of chick lit books in the Philippines were 10,000 copies.
- "Speculative Fiction" as a term is accepted in other nations (Canada, Australia, Japan, etc.) but not in the Philippines.
thanks for the mp3s! It's the next best thing for missing out on Taboan due to work.
ReplyDeleteHey! What about me? :-D
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