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"Dean Francis Alfar's stories are like fallen star: they glow with the light of another world, illuminating our own if only for an instant. These are new myths for the global civilization we find ourselves living in at the beginning of the twenty-first century."
--CHRISTOPHER BARZAK
author of One for Sorrow
"Surely one of the most unusual writers to burst on the literary scene in the last decade or so is Dean Francis Alfar, who may have introduced the term 'speculative fiction' to Filipinos. This first collection of short stories is obviously from the same hand that wrought the funny, magical Salamanca, the hand of a warlock dreaming dreams of unnamed stars. Readers would do well to step into the dreams."
--CRISTINA PANTOJA HIDALGO
author of Recuerdo and Catch A Falling Star
"...the true spell of this collection is the language--capable, confident, fluid, so that readers of any literary disposition will find themselves leaping from sensation to sensation, story to story, with excitement and pleasure. Before any discussions of genre, and certainly beyond any speculation, Filipino literature is a sure thing in Alfar's graceful hands."
--SARGE LACUESTA
author of White Elephants and Other Stories
195 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2007
To reach for the stars is a good thing. To hope against hope is better. To achieve the utterly fantastic - well, that's what the human spirit is all about, isn't it?are the best lines for me. It is inspiring as it leaves a hopeful note that despite all the tragedies (this one just this week) and job-related stress around us. Alfar seems to be telling me that hey, even if you are always stressed out and losing hope, you can always look up at night and look at the stars.
"But I thought the woman had no powers?"
"She's a woman [...] That's power enough."
"To reach for the stars is a good thing. To hope against hope is better. To achieve the utterly fantastic―well, that's what the human spirit is all about, isn't it?"
-MaMachine