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clar2d2 's review for:
Science Fiction: Filipino Fiction for Young Adults
by Dean Francis Alfar, Kenneth Yu
I find it difficult to rate this book as a whole because my opinions on the individual stories ranged from "I feel like I gained nothing from this" to "That was amazing".
Most of the stories I disliked, I disliked because I felt like they were kind of generic sci-fi stories that didn't do anything new, or they tried to do something new and it ended up either not flowing very well for me or having too many plot holes.
I think I actually ended up disappointed with most of the stories here (which is a shame and I wish I weren't), but there were a few I enjoyed so much that I feel they made up for those disappointments - my favorites were "Erase" by Gabriela Lee, "The Ceres Girl" by Lakan Umali and "Infinite Degrees of Freedom" by Victor Fernando R. Ocampo.
Overall, I enjoyed how a lot of the stories showed sci-fi settings and technologies with themes and problems relating to the lives of Filipinos. In some stories the sci-fi was there more as a backdrop for the main issue or themes being tackled. In other stories, the fascinating world and technology were really the ones that ended up standing out to me - there were some really unique concepts presented here.
So while, sure, I disliked most of the short stories here, there were some pretty amazing ones, and I still look forward to reading so much more Philippine sci-fi in the future!
Most of the stories I disliked, I disliked because I felt like they were kind of generic sci-fi stories that didn't do anything new, or they tried to do something new and it ended up either not flowing very well for me or having too many plot holes.
I think I actually ended up disappointed with most of the stories here (which is a shame and I wish I weren't), but there were a few I enjoyed so much that I feel they made up for those disappointments - my favorites were "Erase" by Gabriela Lee, "The Ceres Girl" by Lakan Umali and "Infinite Degrees of Freedom" by Victor Fernando R. Ocampo.
Overall, I enjoyed how a lot of the stories showed sci-fi settings and technologies with themes and problems relating to the lives of Filipinos. In some stories the sci-fi was there more as a backdrop for the main issue or themes being tackled. In other stories, the fascinating world and technology were really the ones that ended up standing out to me - there were some really unique concepts presented here.
So while, sure, I disliked most of the short stories here, there were some pretty amazing ones, and I still look forward to reading so much more Philippine sci-fi in the future!