Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Sunday, December 17, 2017

The stellar night for the 36th National Book Awards winners

Receiving my NBDB and MCC's 36th National Book Awards award. With me are (L to R) Dean Francis Alfar, Master of Ceremonies; Ruel S. De Vera, member of National Book Development Board (NBDB) Governing Board, and member of Manila Critics Circle; Edgie Polistico; Ani V. HabĂșlan of Anvil Publishing; and Jerry G. Tizon, Executive Director of NBDB.


One of the best things that happened to me and my book is the 36th National Book Awards.

The winners of the 36th NBA 2017. See the list of winners HERE.

My first published book, the Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary (PFCDD) wins as the Best Book on Food at the 36th National Book Awards this year (2017). 

These are the books of finalists and winners to the 36th National Book Awards.

It is the chosen winner by the National Book Development Board (NBDB)  and the Manila Critics Circle  (MCC). 

One of the best things that happened in 2017.

On the evening of December 02, 2017,  a tribute is given to all the best books published last year. Certificates, trophies, and cash prizes were awarded to the winners.

With chef Claude Tayag. He wrote part of my book's blurb and refer the PFCDD as the "mother of all food dictionaries to come."

To get a copy or preview of my winning book, click HERE.

With Sir Vic Torres, fellow awardee to 36th NBA. He won in Literary Division, under Essays in English with his book: "To the People Sitting in Darkness" published by the UST Publishing House.

The PFCDD is published by ANVIL Publishing. The book is 10 times more updated than what I posted in my site.
With Sir Jose Wendell Capili, a fellow awardee to the 36th NBA. He won in Literary Division under Literary Criticism/Literary History with his book: "Migration and The Emergence of Southeast Asian Diaspora Writers in Australia, 1972-2007 published by the UP Press.


I spent more than half of my life doing this.
It's larger than life.
But life is short. 


Written words will live forever.
And the words became book
and dwells among us. 
Amen.


I'm thanking everyone and all who got a copy of my book. Special thanks to Anvil Publishing and the team who worked hard for our PFCDD. 



My heartfelt gratitude to my family and relatives, friends, and office mates for their moral support.

The book is dedicated to my dearest Nanay Pita who was my big inspiration in writing my dictionaries. It was heavenly seeing my mother hugging the book tightly with soulful joy and a pure smile when I brought home a copy to her a few months before we lost her.

Daghang salamat sa tanan.

Saturday, November 18, 2017

Winners of 36th National Book Awards (2017)

http://booksphilippines.gov.ph/36th-national-book-awards-winners/#
Our PFCDD won in the 36th National Book Awards under Non-literary Division, Food category. Published by Anvil Publishing.


I was at my home last night from work when a friend sent me a private message on my phone that my book, the Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary won the 36th National Book Awards. 

Yoooohohooo!  was my reply.  I can't measure my joy.  

Thank you to everyone who made the book possible. My special thanks to ANVIL publishing for the publication and nomination.  The Anvil team for working hard editing and polishing my book.


Thank you to The National Book Development Board and the Manila Critics Circle for picking our books.  Congratulation to all of us who made it to the National Book Awards.


The following is the list of the best books published in 2016 that became the winners of the 36th National Book Awards:

Short Fiction in English:
Mariposa Gang and Other Stories
Catherine Torres
University of Santo Tomas Publishing House



Short Fiction in Filipino:
Sangkatauhan, Sangkahayupan: Mga Kwento
Alvin B. Yapan
Ateneo de Manila University Press




Literary Division:


Novel in English:
The Music Child and the Mahjong Queen
Alfred A. Yuson
Anvil Publishing Inc.


Novel In Filipino:
Tito O.
Charmaine Lasar
PageJump Media


Non-Fiction Prose in English:
Marcos Martial Law Never Again
Raissa Robles
Filipinos for a Better Philippines


Non-Fiction Prose in Filipino:
"Sulyap sa Aking Pinanggalingan"
Roque J. Ferriols, SJ
Ateneo de Manila University Press


Poetry in English:
Snail Fever: Poems of Two Decades

Francis C. Macansantos
The University of the Philippines Press


Poetry in Filipino:
Banayad: Mga Tula

Rowena P. Festin
The University of the Philippines Press


Poetry in Waray:
Taburos Han Dagat
Victor N. Sugbo
The University of the Philippines Press


Anthology (Bilingual):
Remembering/Rethinking EDSA
JPaul S. Manzanilla and Caroline S. Hau
Anvil Publishing Inc.


Anthology in Filipino:
Batang Rizal at iba pang Dula

Christine S. Bellen
Ateneo de Manila University Press


Anthology in Waray:
Susmaton: Oral Narratives of Leyte
Merlie M. Alunan
Ateneo de Manila University Press


Graphic Literature:
MelÀg
Bong Redila
Adarna House Inc.


Literary Criticism/Literary History:
Migrations and Mediations: The Emergence of Southeast Asian Diaspora Writers in Australia 1972-2007"
Jose Wendell P. Capili
The University of the Philippines Press


Essays:
To the People Sitting in Darkness... and Other Footnotes of Our Pasts
Jose Victor Torres
University of Santo Tomas Publishing House


Translation:
Shir-Bishaya
Ramon Muzones and Maria Cecilia Locsin-Nava
New Day Publishers


Non-Literary Division:


Food:
Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary
Edgie Polistico
Anvil Publishing Inc.


History:
Feeding Manila in Peace and War, 1850-1945
Daniel F. Doeppers
Ateneo de Manila University Press


Science:
A Field Guide to Flight: Identifying Birds on Three School Grounds
Amado C. Bajarias, Jr.
Ateneo de Manila University Press


Social Sciences:
Out of the Shadows: Violent Conflict and the Real Economy of Mindanao
Francisco J. Lara Jr. and Steven Schoofs
Ateneo de Manila University Press


Journalism:
Peryodismo sa Bingit: Mga Naratibong Ulat sa Panahon ng Digmaan at Krisis

Kenneth Roland A. Guda
The University of the Philippines Press


Leisure:
Pinoy Manners: A Modern Guide to Delicadeza for All Generations

Joy Lumawig-Buensalido, Christine Jocelyn Buensalido


Professions:
Gusto Kong Maging Voice Talent: Mga Sikreto sa Likod ng Dubbing, Voice-over at Voice Acting
Pocholo Gonzales
PSICOM Publishing Inc.


Art:
Eiga: Cinema in the Philippines During World War II

Nick Deocampo
Anvil Publishing Inc.


Language Studies:
Capampangan Roots

Papa Osmubal (Oscar Balajadia)
Holy Angel University Press


Book Design:
Colonial Manila, 1909-1912

Karl Fredrick M. Castro
Ateneo de Manila University Press


Publisher of the Year:
Ateneo de Manila University Press




Related posts
  


 

Thursday, October 13, 2016

A Dreamer Turned Achiever

Edgie Polistico
Q. What do kerosene lamp, mimeographing paper, computers, and food have in common?
A. They were all instrumental to the realization of a 14-year old boy’s dream of writing and compiling his own dictionary.

While many his age were busy balancing their studies and “social life” (hanging out with friends, gossiping, writing love letters to their crushes only because internet, mobile phones and other gadgets weren’t available to them yet) this young man was already busy weaving an extraordinary dream of writing a book, a dictionary, to be specific. Thirty-three years later, the dream would become a reality with the publication of his book, the Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary (PFCDD), published by Anvil Publishing, and launched during the recently-concluded Manila International Book Fair at the SMX Convention Center in MOA, Pasay City.

The boy-turned lexicographer, a loyal employee of IL for 23 years, 20 of which has been spent with the Company’s Legal unit, now known as Legal and Corporate Services Division.

Fueling the dream.

Edgie was all of 14 when his dream started. Born to a humble family in Inopacan, Leyte, his school did not have enough reading and reference materials. “My classmates would ask me for English translations of Cebuano words every time we had a theme-writing session in English. We mostly spoke ‘carabao English.’ We actually had a very big Webster Dictionary displayed at the school’s hallway. The trouble was, we did not know how to use it because the book’s main entries were all written in English. What we needed was a Cebuano – English dictionary.”

This piqued his curiosity. At night, he used a kerosene lamp to help him read. (At the time, electricity was not yet available in his hometown.) “I spent time browsing  through (my) notes, some old books, and a worn-out copy of a Webster Dictionary belonging to my grandfather.” 

A page in Edgie’s mimeographing paper-turned high school notebook.

In order to have money for kerosene, he resorted to various means of earning with his mother: he farmed in the mountains, harvested coconuts to be made into copra and peddled different kinds of food around the town. “One day, while in town, my mother bought a small English-Cebuano dictionary from a street peddler. It was thin, and contained lexicon-type of entries. I read it every day and brought it with me even to wakes, to keep me awake. They all thought I was reading a prayer book! Then a thought occurred to me. I reversed the entries of that small dictionary and made the Cebuano words as the main entries. I compiled and added a few more Cebuano words. That was the start of my Cebuano-English dictionary.” With the money he earned, he would buy reams of mimeographing paper he turned into notebooks which he later used not only for school but also for his researches for his little project. 

After high school, one of Edgie’s uncles sent him to the Divine Word University in Tacloban. While there, he had money enough only for transportation. “I didn’t have money for textbooks and snacks so I frequented the library. And because I was always in the library, my desire to complete my Cebuano-English Dictionary continued. The Filipiniana section became my favorite for researching new entries.” On weekends, to supplement his reading habit, he would take the big Oxford Dictionary from his Uncle’s study room. 

After college, he worked as the personal secretary of his uncle who was elected provincial board member of Leyte. Guess what he bought with his first salary? You guessed it right, his first own dictionary, a pocket Collins Gems English Dictionary. It took him 2 years to translate all the entries of this dictionary into Cebuano.
 
Fulfilling the dream.

In 1993, Edgie was hired by Insular Life’s Tacloban District Sales Office as a data encoder and service clerk. Three and a half years later, he was asked to join the Company’s Legal office, being told that “my 201 file spoke for itself, which is why they needed me to join the team. My life here enabled me to develop my other talents, such as the creation of electronic logbooks that became an indispensable tool for monitoring and data storage of cases we handle until now. Above all, it is here where my writing skill was honed because of the reports we have to write.” 

Even with full-time work in Insular Life, Edgie never lost sight of his dream. Realizing that part of the fulfillment of his dream involved the use of computers, he went on to read about computer programming during his free time. When he was able to set aside money, he went back to school, studying design at AMA Computer Learning Center in Makati City and Alabang.

Finally, in 2004, he wrote and designed his first software application for his Edgie Polistico’s Cebuano- English Dictionary, a dictionary listing thousands of Cebuano words and their meanings in the English language. Still, this dream Edgie had was not easy to sustain. It needed time, and most of all, money. But with persistence, heart, and passion for it, he produced hundreds of CDs of his dictionary. These CDs were given for free whenever he would travel in the Visayas and Mindanao.


Today, a free downloadable version of the dictionary may be accessed at https://sites.google.com/site/pinoydictionary/

Beyond the dream.
 
With the fulfillment of his dream of writing a dictionary, Edgie set his sights on another project, this time, making use of his thousands of photographs gathered during his travels around the country. Aside from writing, he also dabbles in photography, something that goes back to his high school days as his town’s commercial photographer, covering school and social activities, and later, as a photojournalist for his campus publication in college.

Cover of the Philippine Food, Cooking, & Dining Dictionary, now available via Anvil’s website  for P795.00

In 2008, he started the Philippine Food Illustrated (PFI), a blogsite meant to accompany his Edgie Polistico’s Encyclopedic Philippine Food, Cooking, and Dining Dictionary, the latter, the precursor of what would now be called PFCDD.
PFI is a compilation of photos of Philippine food from Luzon down to Mindanao, most of which are not the type one usually sees on the streets or even restaurants, and are usually native to a particular area. (I happened to stumble upon this website while I was researching for photos that would accompany articles for the Life Cycles Magazine. Needless to say, I was happy to find out that the person who took all those good, high resolution photos was just literally 21 floors below me. And as generosity comes natural to Edgie, he allowed the use of his photos for free.) 

On September 18, 2016, Edgie’s years of research and hardwork bore fruit, when his publisher, Anvil Publishing, launched PFCDD. In the words of culinary author and cultural advocate Felice Prudente Sta. Maria who provided the Foreword to the book, “Edgie’s list of food from all over the archipelago offers a lot to signify as cultural heritage. He records variations of a cooked food not only by region but also sometimes from town to nearby town…Indeed food feeds body and soul. This dictionary will feed both as well as a national hunger for celebration of Philippine cultural heritage.” 

The 380-page reference material on Philippine food, cooking and dining will be available soon in branches of National Bookstore. You can also get a copy from Anvil's website.

Edgie says that now is the perfect time to publish a dictionary on Philippine food, cooking and dining because “…culinary courses are now among the popular courses in colleges and universities. Pinoy cuisine and delicacies are also now gaining recognition in other countries, some of which even attract foreign food enthusiasts. Moreover. during my years of research, I realized how rich we are because of our culinary treasures. My dictionary tries to introduce less commonly-known culinary terms from all over the country, aside from the usual terms we already know. If we are not able to record and preserve them, there will come a time when we will lose part of our identity as Filipinos.”

To date, Edgie maintains 11 blog sites, a feat he is able to accomplish all during his free time away from work. “My blogging habit is not so demanding as I don’t update them frequently. However, the site Philippines Illustrated is my main blogsite.” The site lists the other blog sites he currently maintains. The fact that he is now a published author, however, has not diminished Edgie’s passions outside of work— whether for writing, or photography. “I aspire to finish and publish more books that include the following: my true first dictionary, the Cebuano-English Dictionary; the 2nd edition of the PFCDD with twice more entries - expanded and more detailed entries to include our food culture, history, legacy and culinary development; the first Philippine Illustrated Dictionary (on food, transportation, places, etc.); and my biggest and most ambitious project, the Philippine multi-language dictionary. The last will be my contribution to unifying our diverse culture. This is my ‘Tower of Babel,’ an impossible dream that I would like to make possible.
 
For someone like Edgie who dreams big dreams and goes on to fulfill them, even the impossible might one day give way. 

* Edgie is the featured author of Anvil Publishing in October 2016.


http://www.anvilpublishing.com/2016/10/edgie-polistico/


Written by Kaye Liangco-Plata
PR Specialist
Public Relations Staff
Office of the Chief Executive Officer 

This article is a reprint from "In-Focus" a section of the Life Cycle, a monthly magazine digitally published by the Insular Life (IL). This section features employees and their hobbies/activities/passions outside of work so as to inspire fellow employees to take up something different, reach for their dreams and enrich their personal lives.

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