
Leche
A novel by R. Zamora Linmark
April 12, 2011 ⢠5.9 x 8.9 ⢠280 pages ⢠978-1-56689-254-4
A young Filipino Americanās riotous adventures through the sprawling, tragicomic landscape of modern-day Manila.
After thirteen years of living in the U.S., Vince returns to his birthplace, the Philippines. As Vince ventures into the heat and chaos of the city, he encounters a motley cast of characters, including a renegade nun, a political film director, arrogant hustlers, and the countryās spotlight-driven First Daughter. Haunted by his childhood memories and a troubled family history, Vince unravels the turmoil, beauty, and despair of a life caught between a fractured past and a precarious future.
Witty and mesmerizing, this novel explores the complex colonial and cultural history of the Philippines and the paradoxes inherent in the search for both personal and national identities.
Leche includes 31 postcard images.
About the Author
Poet, novelist, and playwright R. Zamora Linmark is the author of the best-selling novel Rolling the RāsĀ (Kaya Press) and three collections of poetry, Prime Time Apparitions, The Evolution of a Sigh, and Drive By Vigils, all from Hanging Loose Press. A recipient of numerous grants and fellowships, including two from the Fulbright Foundation, a Creative Writing Fellowship in Poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts, and a U.S.-Japan Friendship Commission, he has published in numerous journals and anthologies in the U.S. and the Philippines. His stage adaptation of Rolling the Rās premiered in Honolulu in 2008 to critical and commercial success. Linmark divides his time between Manila and Honolulu.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
Ā
Publishers Weeklyās Top 100 Books of 2011
āAs quirky and funny as its oddball characters, Linmarkās latest is a unique, colorful portrait of cross-cultural experience and a view into the complexities of modern-day Philippines through the prism of an ex-patās self-discovery and quasi-homecoming.ā āPublishers Weekly, starred review
āAs cheeky a novel as youāll encounter. . . . The bookās nonstop energy and nonstop attitude are addictive. And in Vince you wonāt find a less predictable tour guide. A lively satiric return to early ā90s Manila, seen from both sides of the Filipino American divide.ā āKirkus
āLinmark delivers a harrowing tale of love, family, and cultural bewilderment, a sardonically funny and vibrant novel about one manās journey to his past. . . . Linmarkās novel reads like a bittersweet love letter to a vast and perplexing nation. This is a story of heritage, sexuality, and self-discovery that is as riveting as its locale is complex.ā āBooklist
āLinmark offers both a meditation on what it means to be Filipino and an exuberant, affectionate, irreverent love letter to the city of Manila from one of its own. . . . Linmark, who like Vince has lived in both Manila and Hawaii, develops a lively and engaging narrative voice as he skillfully juxtaposes these two very different cultures. . . . This is a jaunty, kaleidoscopic novel that amusingly chronicles the many challenges Vince faces moving between cultures. Recommended for readers of lighthearted literary fiction.ā āLibrary Journal
āAt times uproariously funny . . . Linmark weaves cultural and historical research into his story and employs a nonlinear structure to the narrative, including jumps in time, lists of Philippines ātravel tips,ā and postcards to and from Hawaii. . . . Above all, Linmarkās writing is literary: heightened, emotional and beautifully crafted. Linmark began as a poet, and pays close attention to rhythm, economy and word choice, even in such a rollicking, gutsy story. It is a story that many people can relate to, but one that can only be told by a writer of his caliber.ā āHonolulu Star Advertiser
āThe story examines culture-shock, modern-day gay life and the way things were in the early ā90s, all with Linmarkās sense of funny. Only this time, the narrative is in third person. Embedded within the book is a certain playfulness. Interspersed are āTourist Tipsā for Manila, as well as postcards with photos that Vince writes to his friends back home. In short, Leche is all weāve anticipated from Linmark.ā āHonolulu Weekly
āA whirlwind, whistle stop tour of Manilaās high society, celebrity pop culture and seedy underbelly.ā āBookmunch
āThis time around, Linmark uses his trademark po-mo fragmentation for surface texture; it compromises the novelās picaresque forward motion not a whit. This is a languageāand a Manilaāthat should be familiar to readers of the Asian American canon, and Leche feels like the long-awaited completion of something we didnāt know was incomplete.ā āHyphen
āR. Zamora Linmark writes with the incandescent irreverence of a papal heretic, with the poetic and chaotic sense that only the Philippines can bestow, with the language of a sainted seer all held together with an elegant craft and a graceful style. Leche is a beautiful book.ā āChris Abani, author of GraceLand and Virgin of Flames
āLeche is a combustible comedy, a nightmare, a fever dream that with humor and horror somehow captures the fractured Philippine identity. Eye opening, hilarious, and relentlessly seductive, Zamora Linmark holds the reader until the very last page.ā āSabina Murray, author of Forgery and The Caprices
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Description
A novel by R. Zamora Linmark
April 12, 2011 ⢠5.9 x 8.9 ⢠280 pages ⢠978-1-56689-254-4
A young Filipino Americanās riotous adventures through the sprawling, tragicomic landscape of modern-day Manila.
After thirteen years of living in the U.S., Vince returns to his birthplace, the Philippines. As Vince ventures into the heat and chaos of the city, he encounters a motley cast of characters, including a renegade nun, a political film director, arrogant hustlers, and the countryās spotlight-driven First Daughter. Haunted by his childhood memories and a troubled family history, Vince unravels the turmoil, beauty, and despair of a life caught between a fractured past and a precarious future.
Witty and mesmerizing, this novel explores the complex colonial and cultural history of the Philippines and the paradoxes inherent in the search for both personal and national identities.
Leche includes 31 postcard images.
About the Author
Poet, novelist, and playwright R. Zamora Linmark is the author of the best-selling novel Rolling the RāsĀ (Kaya Press) and three collections of poetry, Prime Time Apparitions, The Evolution of a Sigh, and Drive By Vigils, all from Hanging Loose Press. A recipient of numerous grants and fellowships, including two from the Fulbright Foundation, a Creative Writing Fellowship in Poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts, and a U.S.-Japan Friendship Commission, he has published in numerous journals and anthologies in the U.S. and the Philippines. His stage adaptation of Rolling the Rās premiered in Honolulu in 2008 to critical and commercial success. Linmark divides his time between Manila and Honolulu.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
Ā
Publishers Weeklyās Top 100 Books of 2011
āAs quirky and funny as its oddball characters, Linmarkās latest is a unique, colorful portrait of cross-cultural experience and a view into the complexities of modern-day Philippines through the prism of an ex-patās self-discovery and quasi-homecoming.ā āPublishers Weekly, starred review
āAs cheeky a novel as youāll encounter. . . . The bookās nonstop energy and nonstop attitude are addictive. And in Vince you wonāt find a less predictable tour guide. A lively satiric return to early ā90s Manila, seen from both sides of the Filipino American divide.ā āKirkus
āLinmark delivers a harrowing tale of love, family, and cultural bewilderment, a sardonically funny and vibrant novel about one manās journey to his past. . . . Linmarkās novel reads like a bittersweet love letter to a vast and perplexing nation. This is a story of heritage, sexuality, and self-discovery that is as riveting as its locale is complex.ā āBooklist
āLinmark offers both a meditation on what it means to be Filipino and an exuberant, affectionate, irreverent love letter to the city of Manila from one of its own. . . . Linmark, who like Vince has lived in both Manila and Hawaii, develops a lively and engaging narrative voice as he skillfully juxtaposes these two very different cultures. . . . This is a jaunty, kaleidoscopic novel that amusingly chronicles the many challenges Vince faces moving between cultures. Recommended for readers of lighthearted literary fiction.ā āLibrary Journal
āAt times uproariously funny . . . Linmark weaves cultural and historical research into his story and employs a nonlinear structure to the narrative, including jumps in time, lists of Philippines ātravel tips,ā and postcards to and from Hawaii. . . . Above all, Linmarkās writing is literary: heightened, emotional and beautifully crafted. Linmark began as a poet, and pays close attention to rhythm, economy and word choice, even in such a rollicking, gutsy story. It is a story that many people can relate to, but one that can only be told by a writer of his caliber.ā āHonolulu Star Advertiser
āThe story examines culture-shock, modern-day gay life and the way things were in the early ā90s, all with Linmarkās sense of funny. Only this time, the narrative is in third person. Embedded within the book is a certain playfulness. Interspersed are āTourist Tipsā for Manila, as well as postcards with photos that Vince writes to his friends back home. In short, Leche is all weāve anticipated from Linmark.ā āHonolulu Weekly
āA whirlwind, whistle stop tour of Manilaās high society, celebrity pop culture and seedy underbelly.ā āBookmunch
āThis time around, Linmark uses his trademark po-mo fragmentation for surface texture; it compromises the novelās picaresque forward motion not a whit. This is a languageāand a Manilaāthat should be familiar to readers of the Asian American canon, and Leche feels like the long-awaited completion of something we didnāt know was incomplete.ā āHyphen
āR. Zamora Linmark writes with the incandescent irreverence of a papal heretic, with the poetic and chaotic sense that only the Philippines can bestow, with the language of a sainted seer all held together with an elegant craft and a graceful style. Leche is a beautiful book.ā āChris Abani, author of GraceLand and Virgin of Flames
āLeche is a combustible comedy, a nightmare, a fever dream that with humor and horror somehow captures the fractured Philippine identity. Eye opening, hilarious, and relentlessly seductive, Zamora Linmark holds the reader until the very last page.ā āSabina Murray, author of Forgery and The Caprices











