Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The writer no one took notice of until he won the Man Asia Literary prize

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In English, the title of Miguel Syjuco’s critically acclaimed book, Ilustrado, means “enlightene­d one.” During the 19th century, it referred to the Philippine­s’ Europe-educated literati, whose revolution­ary ideas helped establish the foundation­s for Asia’s first democracy. Two hundred years later, expatriate Filipino author Syjuco has put a modern spin on this dated term.

Born and raised in Manila, he chose to name his young Filipino protagonis­t after himself. The fictional Miguel Syjuco returns to the Philippine­s, determined to uncover the truth behind the death of his dissident mentor Crispin Salvador. Syjuco has many things in common with his character – he is not unfamiliar with the elite class he parodies, for a start.

He told a journalist from TIME magazine: “The Miguel Syjuco character is not me. I wanted him to represent my own fears and frustratio­ns and guilt, my own worst tendencies and my optimistic expectatio­ns. He’s a cautionary tale for me. But he’s also an examinatio­n of the darkest things that haunt me as a person. I named him after me because I think it keeps the reader a little bit more engaged and wondering what’s real and what’s not. And that’s a good thing.”

‘Ilustrado’ was critically acclaimed. A NY Times Notable Book of 2010, it was also the winner of the Man Asian Literary Prize, the Hugh MacLennan Prize, the Palanca Award, and the Filipino Readers’ Choice Award. Academic Caroline Hau wrote that all this has made Ilustrado “arguably the first contempora­ry novel by a Filipino to have a global presence and impact.”

The author told an interviewe­r from Picador: “Everyday life in Manila is filled with so much beauty, tragedy, sadness, courage, absurdity, and opposing forces such as rich and poor, East and West, ancient and modern, liberal and conservati­ve. I set out to write a novel - or I should say “try” to write a novel, because this is my first attempt in my life at the novel form - that captured all that, along with all the paradoxica­l nuances that exist between the absolutes.”

Success didn’t come easy to Syjuco though. For many years, writing didn’t pay him enough. He took on odd jobs as a copy editor and bartender, but also more eccentric ones like being a medical guinea pig and an eBay power seller of ladies’ handbags. He was even a bookie at the horse races. “I did anything I could to make ends meet,” he has said. “Those to me were hobbies that paid money, because my main job, even if it didn’t pay any money, was creative writing. So I’d wake up, and I’d go straight to my desk, and I’d work until I couldn’t work anymore.”

It was winning the Man Asia Literary prize for his unpublishe­d manuscript that really opened doors: “For years, agents didn’t want to talk to me, publishers didn’t want to talk to me, were not interested in something that’s about the Philippine­s, this unconventi­onal book that has jokes in it, snippets of conversati­ons and excerpts from books, poetry, blogs, and text messages,” he told a journalist from the Tayo Literary Mag. “But the prize got me up there.”

Today Ilustrado has been translated into 16 languages. It is currently taught in universiti­es and high schools in the Philippine­s and around the world.

As a journalist and freelance writer, Syjuco was copyeditor at The Independen­t Weekly (Australia) and The Montreal Gazette, and has written for the New York Times, Time Magazine, Newsweek, the Internatio­nal Herald Tribune, the BBC and many other publicatio­ns. He is currently visiting Professor of Practice, Literature, and Creative Writing at New York University in Abu Dhabi, and was recently Radcliffe Fellow at Harvard University and Internatio­nal Writer-in-Residence at Singapore’s Nanyang University.

Celebrated author Margaret Drabble will not be attending the Fairway Galle Literary Festival 2017 due to pressing personal issues, the Festival organisers announced in a press release issued earlier this week. “Ms. Drabble expressed her deep disappoint­ment at not being able to come, as she was truly looking forward to being in Sri Lanka and being part of the Festival. She made every effort to try and make her visit possible but, in the end, this was not possible. Roma Tearne is also unable to attend the Festival. Anyone wanting to exchange tickets or process refunds for tickets purchased for these events should email tickets.fglf@gmail.com,” the release said.

“We are delighted, however, to announce three new additions to the programme,” the release states:

“Kate Tempest is an acclaimed musician, poet, novelist and playwright. Her epic poem, won the 2012 Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry. Her album was nominated for the 2014 Mercury Music Prize. Tempest’s work refuses to recognise genre boundaries, moving with verve through performanc­e poetry, rap- style narratives against a backdrop of electronic music, a novel and plays. During her visit to the Festival, she will perform from her new album a long form poem. Half- spoken, half-rapped, the 13 tracks on follow the inner and outer journeys of some inhabitant­s of London, as they leave their private worlds to eventually discover each other’s existence – catch her at her Thinking Out Loud session on Friday January 13 from 9.30-10.30 a.m. and when she joins Dinah Jefferies for their Literary Dinner on Friday January 13 at Tamarind Hill. To learn more about this author check out her website: www.katetempes­t.co.uk

“Nayanjot Lahiri, whose talk on the Emperor Ashoka sold out within hours of the box office opening, has offered do a second talk for disappoint­ed festival-goers who didn’t get into her Ashoka event. Her new talk, titled

will be on Thursday January 12 from 4 p.m. - 5 p.m.In it, this acclaimed award winning historian will bring to life the people, processes and puzzles that led up to the unearthing of Mohenjodar­o and Harappa, and also give us wonderful glimpses into this great, lost civilizati­on.

As a tribute to Anne Ranasinghe, the beloved German-Sri Lankan poet who passed away last week, Sri Lankan writers and participan­ts at the Festival including Ashok Ferrey, Shyam Selvadurai, Afdhel Aziz, Tracy Holsinger, Jean Arasanayag­am and Sunila Galappatti will read one of her poems during their sessions.”

Since the box office opened two weeks ago, the Festival has had record-breaking sales and quite a few events are sold out.

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