Sa isang barangay na naging tapunan ng mga bangkay, isang binata ang natutong mabuhay sa gutom.
Si Galileo ay gutom sa pagkain, sa pagmamahal, at sa paliwanag kung bakit kailangang maging target ng karahasan ang mga tulad niya.
Matapos mapaslang ang kanyang mga magulang sa ngalan ng "giyera kontra droga," inampon siya ng isang sikat na
manunulat at ng asawa nitong editor. Akala nila, maililigtas ng sining ang isang batang winasak ng karahasan. Hindi nila alam na may kasamang dugo ang bawat kuwento.
Habang tinutulungan nilang hanapin ang totoong tatay ni Galileo, unti-unting lumitaw ang mas nakakatakot na tanong na babago sa buhay nilang tatlo:
Kung ang kasamaan ay nasa dugo, may kakayahan pa ba tayong pumili ng kabutihan?
Mula sa maduduming eskinita ng Bagong Silang hanggang sa nagtataasang gusali ng Ortigas, magbabanggaan ang dalawang uri ng kapangyarihan: ang mga taong pumapatay at ang mga taong nagsusulat tungkol sa pagpatay.
Ang Teorya ng mga Tanong ay isang nobela na hindi lamang nagtatanong kung sino ang halimaw... kundi kung sino ang may karapatang magkuwento kung sino ang halimaw.
I’ve always had a special attachment to stories with gay characters because they let me see bits and pieces of myself reflected in them. Maybe it’s because I grew up in an environment where there seemed to be only one accepted definition of what it meant to be homosexual, and I never felt like I fit neatly into that mold.
What I liked about this book is that it doesn’t reduce its characters to their sexuality. More than anything, it’s a story about power, ego, and control. Set against the backdrop of Duterte’s drug war, it explores how ambition, ego, and traumashape the way the characters think, act, and relate to one another.
Teorya ng mga Tanong is the book discussed in the movie About Us But Not About Us, which was later adapted into a play. What makes it even more interesting is that the book mirrors the story of the movie and the play itself. A book inside a movie that reflects the movie it’s in.
Thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. Complex and flawed characters, but human. Love the use of flashbacks. Story evokes similar emotions as what About Us But Not About Us did. Might be polarizing, but Id totally recommend. Just a trigger warning.