Contains seventeen intricate full page drawings and 88 paintings of the artist famous for her detailed, real-life depiction of the calado, a hand-embroidered lacework made of jusi and piña fabrics.
A collection of informal interviews with twelve distinguished Filipina women artists. The artists narrate and explain their experiences in their own distinctive voices.
Create your very own Shopkins Small Mart and shop till you drop with this press-out and play book filled with fruity-scented stickers and more than 100 press-out pieces! Shopkins is a top-selling toy property that features more than 300 cute grocery store characters to collect, trade, and swap. In this create and play book, the cover detaches from the interior pages and slots together to create the Mart. Inside, kids will find all their favorite Shopkins characters to press-out and play with, plus groceries, shopping carts, and more! There are also tear-out scenes to slot into the back of the Mart to change the setting, coupons to invite friends on a shopping spree, shopping list cards, and fruity-scented stickers!
From hungry ghosts, vampiric babies, and shapeshifting fox spirits to the avenging White Lady of urban legend, for generations, Asian women's roles have been shaped and defined through myth and story. In Unquiet Spirits, Asian writers of horror reflect on the impact of superstition, spirits, and the supernatural in this unique collection of 21 personal essays exploring themes of otherness, identity, expectation, duty, and loss, and leading, ultimately, to understanding and empowerment.
"This not-so-scary picture book by National Childrens Book Awardee Jomike Tejido, casts Filipino supernatural creatures in a fresh, amusing light. Young readers will identify with young Haya Sophia as she overcomes her fear of monsters with the help of her Lolo Nanding."--Amazon.com.
Here was Once the Sea features poetry, fiction, and nonfiction guest edited by Rina Garcia Chua, Esther Vincent Xueming, and Ann Ang. While many of these works are comprised mostly of anglophone texts, which reflects the aspirations of regional writers to speak across borders and to the globe at large, several native languages appear on these pages. Here, Southeast Asia refers to the constituent nations of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), namely, Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam, as well as their associated diasporas. The writers and the peoples of the region live and remember more profoundly than we know. Their work explores the ecological across a multiscalar spectrum, featuring both geological landscapes and visceral botanical or animal entanglements, inheriting histories and spiritualities that defy and disrupt modern epistemologies. Together they represent a chorus of offerings, first and foremost to the land and the sea; and secondly to you, our readers, as an invitation to attend to the urgencies and travails of our homes. These are the stories we share and the stories we carry in our pasiking (basket) as we follow movements towards our destinies. These are the stories that sing of hope—for ourselves and for our world; ones that we whisper silently to ourselves as we touch our lips to the familiar earth and wait for the incoming monsoon rain to fall gently on our backs, our fields, our rivers.