The Last Time I Saw Mother: A Novel by Arlene J. Chai FILIPINO AMERICAN EXPERIENCE & FILIPINOS IN THE DIASPORA - Women Writers (Linda Ty-Casper)"My mother never writes. So when the mail arrived that day, I was not expecting to find a letter from her. There was no warning." Between generations of women, there are always secrets relationships kept hidden, past events obscured, true feelings not spoken. But sometimes the truth is so primal it must be told. Now, with haunting lyricism and emotional clarity, Arlene Chai has written an exquisite novel about a family of women who break their
conjuring subtle games of domination and submission against a backdrop of physical dislocation and echoing the conundrums of a colonized land: "The past depends on how we control memory
Paperback: 19 pagesPublisher: Philippine Women's Research CollectiveLanguage: EnglishISBN: NO ISBN
Tanging ang salin sa Filipino ang ilalathala
This book shares not only the recipes for easy home cooking
despite disease and its layers of physical
This book takes a close look at care work
It will make you hold your breath and give it away laughing
California and contributes stories to the Asian Journal
Pastell’s failure to convince Rizal is attributed to the weaknesses of nineteenth century Catholic apologetics
and a cold winter's season in the city of Chicago is the story of a daughter coming of age
Schumacher SJ died on 14 May 2014
while giving the Japanese a taste of what was further to come their way