20-year-old wins Palanca at first try

LEONARD Francis M. Alcoran bags his first Palanca Award for the Hiligaynon short story “Ang Itlog nga wala Nagabalibad” at the recently concluded 67th Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature.

Twenty-year-old Alcoran is one of the winners in the Regional Language Division of the 67th Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature.

This Palanca youngblood’s win is far from beginner’s luck. Rather, it’s a product of hard work, determination and the willingness to learn.

In this prestigious literary competition for Filipino writers, Alcoran bagged the third prize in the Hiligaynon short story category for his work, “Ang itlog nga wala nagabalibad.”

The story is about an old shaman woman who uses an egg to find her missing grandson.

“It’s a story of one’s quest for acceptance—how, at some point in your life, you have to acknowledge the fact that you’re inferior to yourself,” Alcoran explained.

Such profound wisdom from a young man who admits it has only been a year since he started writing fiction seriously.

Alcoran, a Political Science student of West Visayas State University, submitted the earlier cited work to a local writing workshop in Antique. But when he failed to meet its deadline, he opted to finish the story instead for other existing write shops.

That was when he came across the writing workshop of 13-time Palanca winner Dr. Leoncio Deriada at the University of the Philippines Visayas, and the 2017 San Agustin Writers’ Workshop—which Alcoran both earned a spot in.

“Dr. Deriada encouraged me to pass my work to the Palanca, and so I did,” Alcoran narrates.

This bold move catapulted his journey to the Palanca awards.

Alcoran, along with his twin brother, Leynard, grew up listening to the stories by his grandmother and the elders in their community.

“Hearing their stories about the olden times, and the customs in our village somehow enhanced my imagination,” Alcoran said.

The value he placed on these stories further spurred him to develop and put them into writing. “To preserve the stories, it is important to pass them down to the next generation,” he said.

Unbeknown to Alcoran, his habits as a child would prepare him to become a storyteller.

“I love reading books. I read stories by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, R.L. Stine. But growing up, I think I read more poetry than fiction, like the works of Pablo Neruda, Sylvia Plath and Edith Tiempo.” He remembers joining poetry contests occasionally as a young student. But if there was one person who actually influenced him to write, it was his twin brother who also enters his works in write shops. “My twin was also the very first person to read my work,” Alcoran said.

Alcoran shares that anyone who wants to join the Palanca, or any writing stint for that matter, must be brave enough to show his work to others. “The defeated attitude will bring yourself down, so just go—write creatively and enter your stories writing competitions.” (PR)

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