Issued At: 5:00 a.m., 23 November 2009
At 2:00 a.m. today, the Active Low Pressure Area (ALPA) was estimated based on satellite and surface data at 160 kms East of Northern Mindanao (8.8°N, 127.8°E). Northeast monsoon affecting Extreme Northern Luzon.
Metro Manila
![]() 23°C to 31°C | Moderate to Strong: Northeast Manila Bay: Moderate to Rough |

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G is a bottomless wonder. Since college, I’ve seen her cram in a lot of stuff—communication theories, jokes about men, law studies, jokes about men, liaison pressure, jokes about men, possible studies in finance.
Looking at that unflappable, endless profile, a stranger can have no inkling of the oceans sloshing inside.
What's your take on the Mindanao crisis? Discuss views with other readers
But if you were to spend an hour with her, G can’t help but give herself away.
One, she whets her waspish wit on anyone born unfortunately not female.
Two, food commands her absolute focus but not as much as obsession no. 3—coffee.
Yet, last Friday, I was racked with doubt and seriously considered revising the Rules of G after my friend exhibited alarming unpredictability.
For a full 20 minutes and 37 seconds, she abandoned a steaming platter of spicy back ribs.
After placing her order for lunch, G excused herself, saying she would return after “quickly checking out something” in the mall.
When she finally returned, I thought my friend was a little too bright-eyed.
Later, after G ignored her brewed coffee for a full millisecond, I watched her with concern.
Just as I was beginning to wonder if something, or someone, she ate was wreaking havoc inside my bottomless friend, G takes out three things from her purse, which holds a notebook, phones, a coffeemaker and its back-up.
The three books rivet my attention.
And I end up plotting to murder my friend.
G turned out to be one of the first to check out “Their Books,” a benefit sale of books and magazines that were owned, read, reread and hoarded by what must be the most rabid sub-species of book lovers: writers.
Those familiar with the malady know that reading is a two-edged possession. At the outset, a person simplistically thinks that buying makes one own a book. But when turning a page already holds one in thrall, the balance of power shifts to the irreversible, and the possessor becomes the enslaved.
Short of the divine, can any earthly force induce a book lover to part with his opiate?
Now on its third and last day on the second floor of Ayala Center Cebu, positioned just across Watson’s, the sale is organized by the Tsinelas Association Inc., a group of volunteers that has been helping public school children and their families.
(Check out The Tsinelas Diaries [tsinelasdiaries.wordpress.com] to find out what this tireless bunch has been doing, from contributing chairs and setting up libraries to sending upland high school scholars through college.)
To fund two months of free art lessons for selected public schools, Tsinelas cajoled journalists, artists, musicians and just about anyone that cannot be trusted around a pen to contribute the books that moved them, blew a chill through them, made them howl when they saw the moon.
If you want to feed a book habit on a Third World budget or just desire to own a copy that was possessed by (or once possessed) your favorite writer, check out “Their Books” before mall closing today.
G’s coffee actually went cold while we examined her finds. We smelled the paper, tasted how the first pages read, and left the best for last: finding out who owned the books.
Her “Chicken Soup for the Soul” was well-thumbed by Louie Nacorda, memory warrior extraordinaire, whose collection of antiques and intimacy with old Cebu and Church lore confuse many to refer to him, very seriously, as “Monsignor.”
Black without relief and nearly unreadable, the signature scrawled on the inside cover of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories” is unmistakably Insoy’s of Missing Filemon. The disenchanted seminarian and Bisrock diehard is also the tireless idealist behind Tsinelas and their collective dream of helping children discover the world of ideas and possibilities.
G’s last book was the easiest to place. Handsome, pristine and rare, the hardbound collector’s copy of Sylvia Plath’s poems was signed by the flowing but precise pen of Isolde D. Amante. Plath rivals Hemingway as America’s most prominent writer-suicide. Less morbidly, she shares with Amante, Sun.Star Cebu journalist and Peryodistang Pinay blogger, an ear for words and feel for nuances.
Looking across at G, I contemplate slitting my friend’s throat and walking away with her copy of Plath/Amante’s poems. Then I shudder, and the murderous thought abandons me. I return G’s books, smiling.
I have my revenge: her coffee’s cold and “Their Books” is still on. (mayette.tabada@gmail.com/ mayettetabada.blogspot.com/ 0917-3226131)
For Bisaya news, visit Superbalita Cebu.
(November 9, 2008 issue)
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