Letting go of Gilda the ‘layas’
It’s not easy to write about Gilda Cordero-Fernando, the eternal woman, in the past tense. I have written about her or mentioned her in this column and writings elsewhere. After
It’s not easy to write about Gilda Cordero-Fernando, the eternal woman, in the past tense. I have written about her or mentioned her in this column and writings elsewhere. After
Filipinos are mourning the passing of writer, book publisher, and Inquirer columnist Gilda Cordero-Fernando, who died on Aug. 27 at the age of 90 after a lingering illness. Chef Mol
In 2002, a group of us 10 women was put together by Gilda Cordero Fernando as a writing club.
DON’T be ashamed of your gray hair. Wear it proudly like a flag. You are fortunate in a world of so many vicissitudes, to have lived long enough to earn it.”
The terno is such a turn-on,” said Borgy Manotoc.
If you are an old person, conservative and easily disturbed, please skip this column. It is about today’s unpalatable language of the young which is contrary to good manners
People are shocked when they find out that I’m not on Facebook, Twitter or Viber. I myself was surprised to be invited as speaker at a food industry summit
Last year, Dr. Joven Cuanang and I conceptulized an art event for Apolinario Mabini’s birthday. The Apo Mabini wheelchair parade was held within the environs of St. Luke’s Medical Center Global City. Yesterday I received Wig Tysmans’ very clear photos of them and thought it would be nice to remember the event.
I’ve never been to any “roasting,” literary or journalistic. I have no idea what goes on at occasions of that kind.
“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.” – Dr. Seuss, The Lorax
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