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Tough
and tender Fil-Am stories
(Philippine Star, Feb. 16, 2004)
by Alfred A. Yuson
Rodney Dakita Garcia moved to the U.S.A.
in 1971, when he was 16. The bio note in his recently released
first book, a collection of stories, says he played guitar
in a pub to help pay his way through school. He became a
lawyer, while also earning his spurs as a musician, poet and writer.
His two-act musical Hacienda has been staged in the
Washington D.C. area. He lives in Maryland with his family.
Rodney came home for a brief visit last Christmas. It was unfortunate
that we didnt get to meet. I knew him to have composed the
songs featured
in my own three-act play, Luto, Linis, Laba, which
had a couple of reportedly successful runs last year in the same
tri-state area. Our former PETA colleague, the playwright-director
Reme Grefalda, mounted the production by whipping up a cast of
Fil-Am amateurs, while also drawing
Rodney in for the songs.
Grefalda also published an online version of one of Garcias
short stories, Swimsuit Edition, in the Spring 2003
issue of Our Own Voice , the literary e-zine which she helps edit.
That story is joined by six others in Garcias first book,
The Right Place and Other Stories (PublishAmerica / Baltmore,
2003).
Also last December, Ed Maranan from London e-mailed an alert over
the glowing if mostly word-of-mouth reviews being earned by Garcias
book.
Herminia Smith of the Philippine Arts and Letters Media
hails the book as a luminous literary achievement.
She goes on to laud Garcia as a
gifted and a masterful storyteller with a remarkable range of
style. Whether he is narrating in a macho-like voice
the
story of a Manila Mafia, or being campy, contemporary
or
being pensive, poetic,
philosophical and stoic in a love story that does not quite end
happily ever after, Garcia's writing has a gracefully natural
cadence and recognizable realism, with startling revelations.
Not only Filipino
Americans would enjoy this book
(Readers) of any nationality
will find a connection and commonality in the stories that touch
on timeless and universal themes.
The Philippine Embassy in Washington D.C.
hosted the book's launch on Oct. 30, 2003, with readings by NBC-4
news anchor Mil Arcega and Thompson Publishing Group editor Joe
Lustig, as well as a story dramatization by the theater group
QBD, Ink headed by Grefalda.
I had no agent for this book, but it was accepted by the
first and only publisher I sent it to, recounts Garcia.
I'm trying to finish a new manuscript for the Maui Writers
Conference next August because Tess Holthe (the celebrated Fil-Am
author of When The Elephants Dance) suggested that
would be the best way to meet agents and publishers.
Last month Rodney made good on his e-mailed
promise to send over a copy. And not because I owe him one for
that, nor for his musical collaboration in my play, now that Ive
gone through it I will have to agree with the
early raves, that this first book makes for quite a delightful
read.
Hes a natural storyteller all right,
making great capital of his homeland recollections, mostly urban,
while succeeding in juxtaposing these with the transplants
Americanizing travails. The tough guy in the Philippines
tries to turn a new leaf, but soon learns to get even tougher
in his new arena, where racist cops, young Pinoy hoods, blue-eyed
blondes and suicidal bombers pose a bewildering,
but also exhilarating, variety of challenges.
The first story had me eating out of the authors craft-wise,
tough-tender hand. A quirky father-son relationship is essayed
in an appropriately contrapuntal manner, edging sideways and back
between exposition and effective dialogue, while serving up lyrical
accents by way of the fathers central consciousness.
Devotion to his teen-aged son couldnt
stop PasigBoy, a town
toughie of ill temper and rough ways, from serving him up with
an eye patch after
a beating back home. Now he makes up for it with equal
parts diligence and over-protectiveness, even as he tries to make
good in South San
Francisco, while yet unsure, troubled by talk of earthquakes,
of gangs, of dense shoreline fog, and of failure.
Now aging, the father who doesnt
want to be called Pops but Papa does double shifts in a burger
place, where he eventually finds himself
confronting his old demons.
Joseph grips the iron skillet, ambles
around the counter, not feeling his knee anymore. He approaches
the gang and realizes how small he is
compared to them. He smiles at the huge boys. Then he feels like
there is a doorway opening and a moment stands right there in
front of him, in his
face, sneering and fleering, inches away. He is ready to bust
that moment open, and scatter its guts onto the food on the table,
never to be
stitched back.
The ending is riveting and memorable, an
escalation of tough-tender, heart-pounding but vaporous images
limning dazed resolve, which in turn defines a fathers faith
in beating the odds even when all the imagined fears have apparently
joined together.
Without doubt, it is the most literarily
accomplished of the seven stories in the collection. In a few
there may be an over-reliance on
dialogue, so that it becomes too serviceable in filling up the
backdrop or even advancing the exposition. But they are all good
and fast reads,
because Garcias prose rhythm and cadence serve notice too
of realism that is not stark but well-nigh authentic.
All of the stories end with gentle surprises.
Or even when its expected, the closure still manages to
take an offbeat turn. The title story is particularly haunting
for its climax, which pulls out
a TNT from his safe haven of a church and sends him inexorably
in pursuit of a woman he just met, into a mythic river, right
in the foreign city he
wants to save because he is a good man who fixes things.
The ephemeral but condensed love angle may be said to be rather
contrived, however.
A glossary of terms and places is found at the end of the collection,
explaining Pinoyese from balisong to pasyal, masarap to adobo
frog legs
(Daly City, south of San Francisco, has been called Adobo
City because it is said that in the evening, one can smell
the aroma of the dish even
driving through Highway 280.)
One wonders why the body text has to have
Philippine place names in italics, however, while barong
avoids being part of that leaning
gauntlet. And an assiduous Pinoy editor could have prevented such
misspellings as Kainta, jurementado and
minah (Cainta, juramentado,
mynah).
Still and all, this is a fine literary
debut for Rodney Dakita Garcia. The Right Place and Other Stories
certainly bolsters the notion that the future of Philippine literature
in English may depend in large part on the produce of our Fil-Am
siblings.
Especially for first-generation immigrants, their wrenching, toughening
and eventually enlightening experience of growing up in an adopted
country
often translates into excellent material for literature.
Essential too are the quality of articulation and the astute choice
of literary attack to transform that material into
fine reading. Rodney Dakita Garcia has it in him. I wish him luck
and more power in his future fiction. All too obviously, he has
the voice and the memory to gratify us all.
The book is available at Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble stores
in the USA. Or you can visit www.rodshacienda.com to read more
about this auspicious first effort.

Fil-Am
lauded for short fiction
posted at INQ7.net
Jan 16, 2004
WASHINGTON, D.C is abuzz over a book of
short fiction called "The Right Place and Other Stories"
by Filipino-American Rodney Dakita Garcia. Renowned Filipino leader
Gloria Caoile -- referring to a musical Garcia had written earlier
-- told the author, "once again you have broken the glass
ceiling." Herminia Smith, member of the Philippine Arts and
Letters Media, hailed the book as "a luminous literary achievement."
Reader Emiliano Complean said, "Rod Garcia is a natural --
his dialogue, the style, it just flows so easily."
The Philippine Embassy in Washington, D.C.
hosted the book launch on October 30, according to a press statement.
Deputy Chief of Mission, Evan Garcia (no relation) welcomed the
guests and expressed the hope that author Garcia would continue
his literary pursuits, despite his busy legal practice. NBC 4
news anchor Mil Arcega read an excerpt from the title story. Editor
Joe Lustig of Thompson Publishing Group recited poetry from the
last story of the book. The evening was
capped by a dramatization of the first story -- "Pasig Boy"
-- by the theater group QBD, Ink.
According to Smith, "...practicing
attorney Rodney D. Garcia is a gifted and a masterful storyteller
with a remarkable range of style. Whether he is narrating in a
macho-like voice telling the story of a Manila Mafia, or being
campy, contemporary, and humor-filled in a strictly familiar American
setting as in the story 'Swimsuit Edition,' inspired by the special
issue of Sports Illustrated, or being pensive, poetic, philosophical
and stoic in a love story that do not quite end happily ever after,
Garcia's writing has a gracefully natural cadence and recognizable
realism with startling revelations. Not only Filipino Americans
would enjoy this book, but Americans of any nationality will find
a connection and commonality in the stories that touch on timeless
and universal themes."
"I had no agent for this book, but
it was accepted by the first and only publisher I sent it to,"
said Garcia in a press statement. "I'm trying to finish a
new manuscript for the Maui Writers Conference next August because
Tess Holthe ('When The Elephants Dance') suggested that would
be the best way to meet agents and publishers."
"The Right Place and Other Stories"
is available at Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble stores nationwide.
Read more about it at www.rodshacienda.com.
Garcia's book adds to a list of other competencies,
including playwright and composer (for "Hacienda" --
a musical play about the Philippine rebellion of 1986). Later
in that same year, the Philippine Embassy gave Garcia a "People's
Power Award." He is a graduate of the George Washington University
School of Law and is licensed in Virginia, Maryland and California.
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