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May Day Eve and Other Stories

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May Day Eve and Other Stories is a quintet of unsettling tales of mystery, religious zeal, and passion. It features the title story “May Day Eve” as well as “Three Generations,” “Doña Jeronima,” “The Legend of the Dying Wanton,” and “Guardia de Honor.”

Set during the Spanish colonial period, these narratives tap into the qualities of magic realism, romance, and historical fiction, as only the master Nick Joaquin can.

101 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2011

80 people are currently reading
1622 people want to read

About the author

Nick Joaquín

92 books448 followers
Nicomedes Márquez Joaquín (1917–2004) was a Filipino writer and journalist best known for his short stories and novels in the English language. He also wrote using the pen name Quijano de Manila. In 1976, Joaquin was conferred the rank and title of National Artist of the Philippines for Literature. He has been considered one of the most important Filipino writers, along with José Rizal and Claro M. Recto. Unlike Rizal and Recto, whose works were written in Spanish, Joaquin's major works were written in English despite being a native Spanish speaker.

Before becoming one of the leading practitioners of Philippine literature in English, he was a seminarian in Hong Kong – who later realized that he could better serve God and humanity by being a writer. This is reflected in the content and style of his works, as he emphasizes the need to restore national consciousness through important elements of Catholic Spanish Heritage.

In his self-confessed mission as a writer, he is a sort of "cultural apostle" whose purpose is to revive interest in Philippine national life through literature – and provide the necessary drive and inspiration for a fuller comprehension of their cultural background. His awareness of the significance of the past to the present is part of a concerted effort to preserve the spiritual tradition and the orthodox faith of the Catholic past – which he perceives as the only solution to our modern ills.

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5 stars
305 (51%)
4 stars
153 (26%)
3 stars
83 (14%)
2 stars
22 (3%)
1 star
24 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 46 reviews
Profile Image for Airiz.
248 reviews116 followers
February 11, 2012
“Pareng Nick” is a frequent companion of mine when I was in high school. I remembered burying my nose in a dog-eared copy of Manila, My Manila and staying in the library after classes just to search for his anthologies. It’s been ages since I last sat down and binge on some of his works, so the *roundhouse kick* of nostalgia that greeted me at the bookstore when I saw May Day Eve and Other Stories is only expected. Needless to say, I relented to the sudden irresistible urge to pick it up. I finished reading half the book in the bookstore, but I bought it (and another Joaquin anthology) anyway. I suddenly felt like my shelf would be incomplete without it.

May Day Eve is still my favorite story. Despite having read it for perhaps the hundredth time, it still doesn’t fail to make me tremble from the knee-buckling blow of regrets in life (and love) that the characters experienced. Joaquin’s magic mainly lies in the subtle unfolding of events, in a gentle whisper of epiphany that crescendoes into a howl of tragedy by the end. The story revolves around the European-educated Badoy Montiya and the feisty, liberated Agueda as they let one superstitious moment in May Day Eve be the ‘driver’ of their lives, leading into a disintegrating marriage. Agueda is my kind of female protagonist, for the most obvious of reasons: she’s the readers’ little window to Joaquin’s feministic streak that is more pronounced in his other story The Summer Solstice. Great realizations often come when it’s too late; the bitter-sweetness of this lesson lasts in the final moments of the story, wherein the characters took in that they did love each other after all, even if subconsciously.

The other stories are just as enchanting. Three Generations can be considered a little portrait of a family in a patriarchal society, focusing on the three men of each step of generation. Doña Jeronima reads like a classic Filipino legend about love, repentance, forgiveness, and piety. The Legend of the Dying Wanton teems with harrowing scenes of death as well as the beautiful images of freeing yourself…from yourself. Guardia de Honor is a mystifying tale about love, destiny, and chances. I just love how in each story, there is one character that represents rebellion in his/her own way.

Five stars for an amazing read.
Profile Image for Bianca Sy .
245 reviews42 followers
March 5, 2017
1847
Mirror, mirror,
Show to me
Him whose woman
I will be.


1890
Mirror, mirror,
Show to me
Her whose lover
I will be.


I thought it was something like Snow White when I saw the chant and haven't started yet.

I thought it was something like a Cinderella story when I started reading the very first part.

I thought it was something like the story of Bloddy Mary when I read the part of Anastasia's instructions.

And I thought it's a horror story but it wasn't, really.



It's about love.

It's about testing an idea that you shouldn't believe in.

And this story is like about removing the challenge of your own future.

Profile Image for Pyangee lariosa.
31 reviews11 followers
May 12, 2015
a brilliant author who created this great literary piece told us to never force love, that a love will never work if it has only passion and infatuation. the irony of how aguenda told her story to her daughter about a devil she saw in the mirror wherein deep inside labeled him as her husband and how her husband told his grandson he also saw a witch in the mirror which also portrays his wife. regrets came when he finally realize he forgotten he fell in love with his wife. tragic ending, not because they bitterly hated each other and their marriage but rather the tragic ending of how they never realize they both fell in love in the first place.
Profile Image for Aloysiusi Lionel.
84 reviews5 followers
October 13, 2018
In his lifetime, Dahling Nick set the bar in stylizing prose, and this bar demanded that every writer had to listen to, and learn from, the sense, rhythm and power of all his prose. I have read some of his widely published reportages, and reading his popular works in fiction made me conclude that he is the best Filipino writer in English, in a language he wrote with the melisma of Spanish, in a language he beautifully captured by pen or typewriter. The cadence of each line must be the intensity of each click and throb. This knack of Nick must soar to the heights and dive to the vortexes of the reader's imagination. Particularly in this volume, the great man showcased how he devised a colonial tongue to portray the years gone by when the townsfolk were fascinated by apparitions, monstrosities and lovers-turned-legends. Among the five stories here, "Doña Jeronima" and "Legend of the Dying Wanton" are my personal favorites, for both are fused with sophisticated prose which could not be toppled down nor pinched and touched by all recently published stories combined. Then I discovered, not too late this time, that most of the emerging and acclaimed fictionists today are undoubtedly inspired by his storytelling techniques. What a gift of words, to effortless fathom causes, consequences, pain, suffering! And this humbled capsule review will never suffice the reviewer's vicarious effort to emulate.
Profile Image for booklady.
2,744 reviews186 followers
recommended
July 27, 2012
Enbrethiliel over at Shredded Cheddar threw this into the mix as well. G. K C., Flannery, move over... ;) She says these are some goooood short stories! Thanks a second time!
Profile Image for guiltlessreader.
387 reviews123 followers
September 27, 2014
I felt homesick reading this. Nothing compares to reading a book written by an author coming from your own country, from your own realities. Obvious really, but I didn't really realize it until I finished this. Full review on my blog Guiltless Reading.
Profile Image for ian without an e.
114 reviews2 followers
March 7, 2025
Nick Joaquin describes Manila with powerful vividness, attention to detail, and touch of magic that it’s hard not to feel nostalgic and long for a time and place I’d never even lived through.

Each of the the five stories in the book masterfully explore themes of self-discovery, family ties, and traditions while also honoring the religious and folk stories of their time.
Profile Image for Vicho Bookbender.
89 reviews
June 14, 2024
Agueda was described to be a bold, liberated, and a non-conformist young woman who was 'ahead of her time'. While Badoy as a promiscuous young man who wanted to prove his machismo, but he was 'deliriously in love' with Agueda.
Profile Image for Gieliza.
371 reviews25 followers
September 4, 2018
4 stars!
An excellent collection of tales interweaving history, legend and magic.
Profile Image for Gianna.
118 reviews
November 21, 2024
I was probably just not cultured enough for this. I had difficulty with the run-on sentences and in general, I'm not really a fan of magic realism. I thought I'd give this a chance but I guess this one solidified my feelings about this genre.

I also haven't enjoyed any short story compilation so far, so this tells me maybe I'm just not into that too. Anyway, I think there is a reason why May Day Eve gets a special mention -- it was the most engaging one, in my opinion. It didn't drag too much, and the flip/twist was welcome and intriguing.
Profile Image for RV Henretty-Jornales.
25 reviews4 followers
December 22, 2024
Heavy on the “women are the root of sin”, weird descriptions of “young girl’s” breasts, and and obvious urge to be GG Marquez and authors of that ilk. Not going to be easy to read through, unless you’re really into pious superfluity.

Two stars because it was probably something that carried more weight in its time, but, jeez, has not aged well.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
12 reviews
January 5, 2025
Nick Joaquin's mastery of language and themes exhibited the power of short stories. In a few pages, the richness of a country's beliefs and practices are introduced to the readers. But beyond this introduction, it raises moral and philosophical questions on these 'normalized' practices with a twist of supernatural, plot points, etc.
Profile Image for Raymund Mata.
32 reviews
April 27, 2025
Despite using flowery language I had great time reading the short stories in this collection. My personal favourite is "The Legend of the Dying Wanton". The protagonist is very relatable. I know the feeling of still being judged even though I'm doing my best to purge myself of my old habits and to reform my life.
Profile Image for Jessica.
58 reviews
May 9, 2025
It's magic whenever I read Nick. His prose is explosive; he makes paragraphs sing.

He toys with English in a way I've never seen others do, breaking conventional rules and stringing unlikely words that punch in cohesion.

He is one of, if not THE best Filipino writer in English.
Profile Image for Jom.
145 reviews2 followers
February 8, 2020
Magic, miracles, curses and vision; the blend of mysticism set alternately during the Spanish and modern era gives a unique look on Philippine culture.
Profile Image for Ann.
1,595 reviews44 followers
April 20, 2022
My favourites are "Three Generations" and "May Day Eve".
Profile Image for aeji༊*·˚.
84 reviews
January 4, 2023
I just read May Day Eve but oh well... The story is somewhat good... A love story and a bitter reminiscent of a passed lover. Somewhat of a gothic tale with that witchy brews and devil paradox
Profile Image for Ang.
40 reviews
Read
February 22, 2025
short book by pinoy author read in (mostly) bicol!
Profile Image for si.
36 reviews1 follower
September 30, 2025
Nick Joaquin, you are a God. I hope I'm an influencer so anvil would send me your works! 😀
1 review
November 1, 2025
Loved every short stories in this book. Every story reflects the societal issues and culture of Filipinos in the time of Spaniards.

Doña Jeronima is my favorite amongst the short stories.
Profile Image for Sandei Barrera.
7 reviews
Read
December 23, 2025
gets kung bakit sya national artist, every story is unique at matalino ang pagkakasulat,, malalim rin sya magingles endi puchu puchu ung storyline
Profile Image for ina.
25 reviews
Read
December 26, 2025
stories ranking:
1. May Day Eve
2. Guardia de Honor
3. The Legend of the Dying Wanton
4. Dona Jeronima
5. Three Generations
Profile Image for Cielbert.
155 reviews8 followers
August 29, 2016
I had read a Nick Joaquin once during my sixth semester in college, back when I was still taking Philippine Literature class. I first read his work Summer Solstice and, truth be told, I was deeply mesmerized by his skill. My first impression of him was mostly positive because of his unique style of writing, his atmospheric prose and very witty plot twists.

But I'm not quite sure about this one.

May Day Eve and Other Stories has caught my attention when I visited our local bookstore during a date night with my best friend because of its eerie cover. I decided to buy it because of that specific reason itself and I didn't force myself to expect something 'mind-blowing' from it. I started reading the book with very low expectations so to speak.

This 100-page book is divided into five 'historical contemporary fantasy (and even science) fiction' stories and each has its own flavor, a different genre that complements the overall mystical and horrific vibe that, I'm pretty sure, the publisher was trying to go with (in which, I think, they've failed).

I don't know but I find this collection too overboard that it resulted to a dull and lacklustre personal experience instead. I only liked Three Generations and the rest of the short stories were so-so. Not to mention I had a very hard time connecting to any of the characters, though some were interesting, and that most of them were one-dimensional, black and white.

Don't get me wrong. I see why the author was named as one of our National Literature Artists because just like what I have said, he had skill. It maybe inconsistent but it's still skill. Undeniable. Unconventional. Bizarrely magnetic.

You know what, let my numbers speak of what I truly feel about this book.

Three Generations: 4/5
Doña Jeronima: 1/5
The Legend of the Dying Wanton: 2/5
May Day Eve: 2.5/5
Guardia de Honor: 1.5/5
TOTAL: 11/20

FINAL RATING: 2.75/5 rounded up to 3

3 stars! I liked it!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 46 reviews

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