![]() |
One Tribe AWP Award Series in the Novel M. Evelina Galangs
One Tribe is a bold, ambitious, moving, and deeply surprising novel
about the necessity and dangers of the human need to belong to other people.
Galang writes beautifully and precisely about the world of her wonderful
main character, Isabel Manaloher students, her lovers, her parents,
her fearsand in doing so has written a universal book about teaching,
fear, parenting, and love. Reading One
Tribe, I entered a strange, feminine worldthe Yin mind of a
caring teacher. A teacher myself, I identify with Isabel Manalo, whose
students dwell in an alien country. A poetic book. This novel deftly
navigates the tension over being American and yet not quite so; the conflict
between race and personal relations; and the contradiction between the
reality of history and that of the present. It adds to the growing body
of literature about Filipino presence and experience on this continent. One Tribe
is political without being preachy, and in the end is a layered story
about survival, especially for the young women caught up in this violent
struggle (a veritable culture war) over affirmations of power and territorya
paradigm that mirrors the conflicted history of the Philippines. One Tribe
is ambitious, beautifully paced, ingeniously constructed, a multilayered
novel in which virtuosity is a vehicle for wise, deeply compassionate
storytelling. "In Virginia Beach, Isabel galvanizes the drifting teens with reenactments of the Filipino myth of creation and other empowering stories of ethnic identity. Yet she is criticized in the community for her "white" ways and for engendering what the parents see as disrespect for authority; they insist she stage a traditional beauty pageant instead. Her attempts to befriend the vapid, in-fighting teenage girls show her that their lives are circumscribed by tsismis (literally, a dangerous monsoon rain; figuratively, gossip) and hiya (a hot flower in bloom, metaphor for the shame of speaking up). Gradually, Isabel begins to transform herself into a "fighting Filipina" with the help of a fellow teacher's aggressive political preaching and through an autobiographical photography project that forces her to examine her own life." Kirkus Reviews, Nov 1, 2005 v73 i21 p1158(1) "Galang infuses
her novel about Filipino Americans with a sense of urgency by crafting
it around the lives of a group of troubled teenagers struggling to find
their way in both their ethnic and geographic communities. . . .The danger
teens face and the concern Galang expresses are real, and she demands
that readers acknowledge just how difficult it can be to straddle two
ways of life while seeking your own place in the world." "Author M. Evelina
Galang weaves a strange world in One Tribe which is at once alarming
and familiar in its juxtaposition of languages and the undertow of cultural
mayhem: Filipino "colonial mentality" versus Filipino claimants
of island heritage; packs of hip hop upstarts who intermingle Tagalog
and Black street lingo versus staid advocates of proper assimilation into
white mainstream society." |
|
New
Issues Poetry & Prose, Western Michigan University, Dept. of English, |
|