Joel M Toledo: A
Sharp-witted Filipino Author and
Poet
Filipino poet Joel
M. Toledo grew up in Silang in the rural province of Cavite close
to Manila. He is the
son of a navy man and his family was pauperized
and impoverished. Moreover, he grew up without
electric current in his house.
In spite of poverty, Toledo persists to make
good of his life. At the age of 16, he was accepted
into the University of the Philippines and took a degree in Journalism and
English. Joel M. Toledo holds a master degree in Creative Writing (Poetry) from
the University of the Philippines in Diliman, Quezon City. He likewise finished
the undergraduate degrees (Journalism and Creative Writing).

Joel M. Toledo has the
author of the three books of poetry and also the editor of two poetry
anthologies. His three books of poetry are Chiaroscuro,
The Long Lost Startle, and Ruins and Reconstruction and he edited Under the Storm: An Anthology of
Contemporary Philippine Poetry. His first book was Pedro and the Life Force (1997), a work for fantasy for young
adults. And lately, this was followed by Chiaroscuro
in 2008 and a second book of poems called The
Long Lost Startle in 2009. Joel’s third book of poetry called Ruins and Reconstructions refocuses his
work from nature and rural life in the city. And lately, he authored the book
of poems which is the Fault Setting in
2016.
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Pedro and
the Life Force (1997)
|
Toledo’s Pedro
and the Life Force is all about the story of 14-year old Pedro who is trust
into early maturity when his father was killed. At about the same time, Sta.
Ines, his home barrio, is hit by severe drought. His younger brother, Pablo, lies
dying of a strange malady and begs for water to drink. This is a fantasy
fiction that was originally published in 1997.
 |
Chiaroscuro 2008
|
Joel M. Toledo’s first book of poems
Chiaroscuro is about moving from the
darkness of his home to the bright lights of Manila. It is a collection of
verses that would not raise qualms into its qualifications as a work of art, or
more specifically, as a work of poetry. According to a comment, “Chiaroscuro” is how the speaker, the
voice that wafts through the shadowy geographies of the poems, seems hopelessly
smitten by the beauty of the language.
 |
The Long Lost
Startle 2009
|
He also asserts in his sophomore poetry
collection, The Long Lost Startle, “I can do with less electricity”. Hailing
from country where sources of power (both literal and figurative) are not
dependable, he has written a collection of poems that taps other kinds of
energy- mostly meditative and mostly acquired through the poet’s observation
and reflection. According to the comment of Jim Agustin, The Long Lost Startle Poems of Toledo is a poem that crosses the
tightrope between joy and sadness and a full review to follow hopefully in the
not so distant future.
 |
Ruins and
Reconstruction 2011
|
Toledo’s
Ruin and Reconstruction, according to
a comment, it talked about the upcoming thunder storm (which is the Ondoy) and
its effect on the people- about the floods and the deaths of people.
 |
Fault Setting 2016 |
“Here’s
to homecoming, my friends”, Joel M. Toledo unites in this magnificent book,
Fault Setting: Poems in 2016. “Cheers to the resistance”. Each poem in
this collection is indeed a form of homecoming and an essay in resi stance, a map of the heart that will
guide readers into the new worlds and ways of being. Toledo’s Fault Setting is
propelled by the tentative: grave enunciations- stories, soliloquies, musings-
tempered by subtle wit, conceits, tangents that reveal a strange eye through
which the world’s fallibility is understood, in the meantime.
Joel M. Toledo was the winner of the recent Merit
Age Press Poetry Prize in San Francisco and placed second in the 2006 UK Bridport Prize for his poem, “The Same Old Figurative “. He was also
the recipient of the same year NCCA
Literary Prize and he has won awards for his poetry in English, including two Don Carlos Planca Memorial Awards for
poetry, The Philippines Free Press
Literary Award, The Merit age Press
Poetry Prize in San Francisco, USA, and was the first Asian to win the Bridport Prize for Poetry in Dorset, United
Kingdom. Furthermore, he was the last
editor of the now defunct Philippines Free Press Magazine. He was also the
recipient of the Rockefeller Foundation
Creative Arts Residency at the Bellagio Centre in Italy. Joel M. Toledo was
the Philippine delegate to the co-editor
of Caracoa 2006, the offi cial literary journal of
the Philippine Literary Arts Council (PLAC). He was also the guest of the 2010
Singapore Lit Up Festival and Mike Ladd caught up with him there to record this
interview and poetry writing. Joel M. Toledo is currently
working on a new collection of poems. And he worked also as a music reviewer
for the Manila Times and current ly teaches literature at
Quezon City, Manila.
Despite
the heaviness of the path that Joel M. Toledo has walk through, he doesn’t give
up. But instead, he uses his willingness to continue his dream. It doesn’t mean
that if you are impoverished, you cannot go through and accomplish your dreams.
Strength is beyond you. Joel M. Toledo had conquered them all. And now, he is
one of the 21st Century Philippine author and a sharp-witted poet.
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