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The anthology of Alfar's work, only
locally available at this time, I think. |
I'll admit that I wanted a Filipino Fantasy setting, but until I began to read the stories set in Hinirang (a sort of shared fantasy world for certain Filipino writers) I was locked into that whole "I gotta be slavishly historical to the setting" mindset, ignoring the fact that D&D and many other fantasy RPGs were: (1) not historical; (2) set in a somewhat generic pseudo-medieval fantasy setting inspired by various sources and the imaginations of the setting creators.
There are a number of Hinirang authors, but the most active is
Dean Francis Alfar. And many of these stories are available online to read for free -- let me share them with you.
First mention must go to
L'Aquilone du Estrellas (The Kite of Stars), which -- at the time of this writing -- still appears (where it made its original debut) on
Strange Horizons. This short story made it into
The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror Seventeenth Annual Collection. In addition to the strength of the story itself, it comes the closest to giving a travelogue of the whole of Hinirang.
Other Hinirang stories you may wish to read online:
- The Middle Prince (an iconoclasticly plotted fairy tale)
- How Rosang Taba Won a Race (an unusually structured folk tale and soon-to-be-published children's book set in Ciudad Meiora -- the Hinirang equivalent of Manila)
- Terminos (a Hinirang shuttlebop story)
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| Art by Carl Zeno Manalo for the story "The Middle Prince" |
Sadly, one of my favorite stories after "L'Aquilone" is not online, though an excerpt appears on his blog. The story is
Sabados con Fray Villalobos (Saturdays with Fray Villalobos). I thoroughly enjoy this partially because of the showdown between the Katao
mambarang (a riff on the Filipino
mambabarang - a sorceror who specializes in insect-based curses) and the Inspancialo priest; the other reason I enjoy it is the recipes and the way those recipes are ultimately tied into the
mambarang's come-uppance.
Another Hinirang story not by Alfar, but by Vincent Michael Simbulan is
In the Arms of Beishu, a story about the Tsino (the Hinirang equivalent of the Filipino-Chinese who've been here since before the Spaniards came).
Yet another Hinirang story -- one by Nikki Alfar -- is set outside of the land of Hinirang, but in the world of Hinirang still, and is called
EmberWild.
Of course, other stories are out there, and I plan to add to the collection of stories set in Hinirang some day, but for now I'm taking stock of the canon -- and I'm eagerly awaiting the latest installment that Alfar assures me involves the Heroes of Hinirang and the representatives of the Pio Familia in the land of Hinirang.
Or maybe I can dispense with writing stories altogether and just do the sourcebook I've wanted to do for a long time.