 Editorial
Reviews
From
Kirkus Reviews , August 1, 1991
It's coming-of-age time in the Philippines, where a young
American priest returns to bury his mother, question his faith,
find his home, and fall in love. Ben Lucero first visits Cebu,
his mother's hometown near Manila, when he travels there for her
funeral. As a guest in the home of his wealthy and powerful Aunt
Clara, he finds himself disoriented by the unfamiliarity of
Filipino life--especially when confronted by the spectacle of
self-inflicted crucifixion, a grisly local custom by which
penitents attempt to placate the divine wrath--and overwhelmed
by his sudden infatuation for Ellen, his aunt's secretary.
Gradually and belatedly, Ben discovers the forces and events
that shaped his family and formed the silent, unknown background
of his life: the brutality of the Japanese occupation, the
poverty and clannishness of Filipino life, the weird syncretism
of the indigenous Catholicism, the pervasive corruption of the
island authorities. He flees to the security of his native
Seattle, but there he finds himself haunted by his recollections
of Cebu, and impelled by circumstance to resolve the doubts he
has experienced regarding his faith and identity. Bacho writes
with a light touch, lending an ambiguity to his narration that
can be frustrating but is more usually intriguing. His
characters and situations reflect a maturity rarely found in
first novels, and his ending, in its refusal to provide a simple
resolution, succeeds in adding a new depth to an
already-intricate construction. A sensitive--and
convincing--debut. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates,
LP. All rights reserved.
The
author, P.R. Bacho prba@u.washington.edu , July 3, 1997
Cebu will be followed by a collection of short stories.
The collection's name, Dark Blue Suit, will take readers
back to Seattle's Central Area, with somewhat similar characters
whose traits were revealed/explored in CEBU. the collection will
be published by the UW Press, and will be out this fall (September)
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