Life can still be a fairy tale even for a solo mom
DIARIES, journals and planners are staples of bookstores and boutiques at the end of the year. For the first time there’s one that addresses a single mother’s needs.
DIARIES, journals and planners are staples of bookstores and boutiques at the end of the year. For the first time there’s one that addresses a single mother’s needs.
AFTER a near drowning experience in Puerto Galera in his early teenage life, Alvin Alcober made sure he learned how to swim.
WHO’S afraid of the tikbalang, the half-human, half-horse in Philippine mythology?
It is said that this creature moves with incredible speed and gets married when the weather is playing tricks — that is, when the sun is out and rain is falling at the same time.
IF there is a landmark worth erecting in Batangas province in northern Philippines, it would be the sculpture of the balisong (fan knife) that has defined the unique art, craft, and culture of Batanguenos for centuries.
ROCK and roll legends never cease to hog the limelight. After sold out concerts and composing more music that multitudes love, they transform into other adorable personas.
PHILIPPINE-made decorative candles were a big hit at one of the biggest products exhibitions in the world held at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibit Center last month.
IT was a festival that had the child as the center of the universe.
Six films – Nino Bonito, Debut, Kapogs, Lumang Kahoy, Kinulayang Kiti, and Sweet Mandy- looked at the world through the children’s smiles and tears in the recent 3rd CinePambata Film Festival held at SM Centerpoint.
THE Diliman Book Club, which meets every Saturday at the ROC Restaurant at UP Balay ng Alumni at the Quezon City campus, usually discusses social sciences and politics with the author of the moment.
“ON Years and Songs” was a glimpse of the life of Rachelle Gerodias, one of the country’s leading sopranos, on and off the stage.
HER story of literal heartbreak deserves its own teleserye with the end lesson of how art can be one’s salvation. But that is getting ahead of foremost feminist visual artist Brenda Fajardo’s true-life tale.