          |
Sleep in Me By Jon Pineda
University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 2010
Against the backdrop of his teenage sister’s car accident—in which a dump truck filled with sand slammed into the small car carrying her and her friends—Jon Pineda chronicles his sister Rica’s sudden transformation from a vibrant high school cheerleader to a girl wheelchair bound and unable to talk. For the next five years of her life, her only ability to communicate was through her rudimentary use of sign language. Lyrical in its approach and unflinching in its honesty, Sleep in Me is a heartrending memoir of the coming-of-age of a boy haunted by a family tragedy.
A prize-winning poet’s account of the irreparable damage and the new understanding that tragedy brings to his Filipino American family, Pineda’s book is a remarkable story maneuvering between childhood memories of his sister cheerleading and moments of monitoring her in a coma and changing her adult diapers. Pineda adeptly navigates between these moments of idyllic youth and heartbreaking sadness. Vivid and lyrical, his story is an exploration of what it means to live deeply with tragedy and of the impact such a story can have on a boy’s journey to manhood.
—Publisher’s release
|
Secrets of the Eighteen Mansions
By Mario I. Miclat
Bulaklak sa Tubig: Mga Tula ng Pag-ibig at Himagsik | Flowers in Water: Poems of Love and Revolt
By Joi Barrios
The Chinese and Chinese Mestizos of Manila: Family, Identity, and Culture, 1860s-1930s
By Richard T. Chu
Archipelago Dust
By Karen Llagas
Cory: An Intimate Portrait
Edited by Margie Penson-Juico
Ilustrado
By Miguel Syjuco
The Evolution from Horse to Automobile: A Comparative International Study
By Imes Chiu
Angelica’s Daughters A Dugtungan Novel
By Cecilia Manguerra Brainard, Erma Cuizon, et al
History of the Philippines: From Indios Bravos to Filipinos
By Luis Francia
Sleep in Me
By Jon Pineda |