The Halo-Halo Review is pleased to interview authors in the aftermath of a book's release. This issue's featured writers include Jonel Abellanosa.
What is your most recent book?
My latest
book is my poetry collection, Songs from My Mind’s Tree, published by Clare Songbirds Publishing House in New York.
When was it released?
It was
released in the first part of 2018.
What has been the response/what has surprised you about the
response?
I bought a box of copies of the collection to
sell and give to friends here in the Philippines. Readers have bought copies,
others reserving copies. The poet, fictionist and critic Alfred Yuson has
written a review of it published in the Lifestyle Section of the Philippine Star. Since I live in the
Philippines, I’m not aware of the response to it in the United States.
Tell me something not obvious or known about the book.
Perhaps the reader will have to reread several
times to notice the rhythmic attempt to mirror how the mind behaves. With the
advent and eventual primacy of quantum mechanics over the scientific paradigm
and the ethos of our age, the mind and its behaviors leapt into the realms of
human consumption and study under the wide and expansive so-called “umbrella”
of “Consciousness Studies.” I also implicitly tried to at least suggest my
grappling with science’s “hard problem”—how countless neurons, synapses,
electrical activities and other brain functions are able to give rise to
consciousness, making us feel love, anger, hate, compassion, etc, which in
artificial intelligence is believed to be the process of reaching the highest
possible level of complexity that gives rise to the singularity of consciousness—producing
machines that have emotions.
What are you working on now?
CSPH will
also be publishing my collection, Multiverse,
in late 2018. I wish to share here that I have two more forthcoming poetry
collections—Sounds in Grasses Parting
from Moran Press, and my first speculative poetry collection, Pan’s Saxophone, from Weasel Press.
I am writing my next poetry collection called, The Quatrains.
For almost two years now, I have been working on
my first novel, which I hope will be able to unify my beliefs, world view,
political views, spirituality, literary theories and speculations into a
kaleidoscope that not so much provides answers as invite readers to reach their
own conclusions.
*****
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