Linda Ty Casper

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Linda Ty Casper
Ty-Casper.jpg
Born1931 (age 9192)
OccupationFilipino writer

Linda Ty Casper (born 1931) is a Filipino writer. She is a recipient of the S.E.A. Write Award.

Contents

Life

Born as Belinda Ty in Malabon, Philippines in 1931, she spent the World War II years with her grandmother while her father worked in the Philippine National Railways, and her mother in the Bureau of Public Schools. Her grandmother told her innumerable stories about the Filipino's struggle for independence, that later became the topics of her novels. Linda Ty Casper graduated valedictorian in the University of the Philippines, and later earned her Master's degree in Harvard University for International Law. In 1956, she married Leonard Casper, a professor emeritus of Boston College who is also a critic of Philippine Literature. They have two daughters and reside in Massachusetts.

Her works include the historical novel DreamEden and the political novels Awaiting Trespass , Wings of Stone , A Small Party in a Garden , and Fortress in the Plaza . She has also published three collections of short stories which present a cross-section of Filipino society. [1]

In 1992, Tides and Near Occasions of Love won the Philippine PEN short story prize; another at the UNESCO International Writers' Day, London; and the SEAWrite Award in Bangkok "Triptych for a Ruined Altar" was in the Roll of Honor of The Best American Short Stories, 1977. [2]

Her novel Awaiting Trespass which is about the politically sensitive theme of torture by the Marcos regime was published by Readers International of London. This work gained her major critical attention in the United States for the first time, and in Britain the novel was chosen as one of the five best works of fiction by a woman writer published in 1985–86. [ citation needed ].

Published works

Awards

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References

  1. /The History of Filipino Women's Writings], retrieved on: November 26, 2012
  2. "CSEAS". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-01-10., Abstract Center for Southeast Asian Studies], retrieved on: November 26, 2012

Sources