Read or Die Convention
Home

RodCon 2007
Registration
Advocacy
Guests of Honor

Programming
Dealers Room
Events
Pinoy Readers' Choice Awards 2007
Gallery
Staff

Initiatives
Gawad Kabataan

Indepedent Press Philippines
Manila Review

Guests of Honor

National Artists for Literature Virgilio Almario and F. Sionil Jose will be our Guests of Honor in RodCon 2007. Virgilio Almario will deliver the keynote speech on February 3 while F. Sionil Jose will open the convention on February 4.

Keynote speeches will also be delivered by Dr. Felicitas Pado, president of the Reading Association of the Philippines, and Mr. Hector Tagaysay, chairman and founder of AHON Foundation.
 
Virgilio Almario
Virgilio Almario, also known as Rio Alma, is a poet, literary historian and critic, who has revived and reinvented traditional Filipino poetic forms, even as he championed modernist poetics. In 34 years, he has published 12 books of poetry, which include the seminal Makinasyon and Peregrinasyon, and the landmark trilogy Doktrinang Anakpawis, Mga Retrato at Rekwerdo and Muli, Sa Kandungan ng Lupa. In these works, his poetic voice soared from the lyrical to the satirical to the epic, from the dramatic to the incantatory, in his often severe examination of the self, and the society.
 
He has also redefined how the Filipino poetry is viewed and paved the way for the discussion of the same in his 10 books of criticisms and anthologies, among which are Ang Makata sa Panahon ng Makina, Balagtasismo versus Modernismo, Walong Dekada ng Makabagong Tula Pilipino, Mutyang Dilim and Barlaan at Josaphat.
 
On 25 June 2003 he was proclaimed National Artist for Literature.
 
 
F. Sionil Jose
F. Sionil Jose’s writings since the late 60s, when taken collectively can best be described as epic. Its sheer volume puts him on the forefront of Philippine writing in English. But ultimately, it is the consistent espousal of the aspirations of the Filipino--for national sovereignty and social justice--that guarantees the value of his oeuvre.
 
In the five-novel masterpiece, the Rosales saga, consisting of The Pretenders, Tree, My Brother, My Executioner, Mass, and Po-on, he captures the sweep of Philippine history while simultaneously narrating the lives of generations of the Samsons whose personal lives intertwine with the social struggles of the nation. Because of their international appeal, his works, including his many short stories, have been published and translated into various languages.
 
Jose is also a publisher, lecturer on cultural issues, and the founder of the Philippine chapter of the international organization PEN. He was bestowed the CCP Centennial Honors for the Arts in 1999; the Outstanding Fulbrighters Award for Literature in 1988; and the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Journalism, Literature, and Creative Communication Arts in 1980.
 
He became National Artist for Literature in 2001.