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Louis Bulaong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Louis Bulaong
Bulaong in 2018
Bulaong in 2018
Born1996 (age 27–28)
Tacloban City, Leyte, Philippines
OccupationNovelist

Louis Bulaong (born 1996) is a Filipino writer best known for his science fiction novels Escapist Dream and Otaku Girl.[1][2][3]

Born in Tacloban City, Philippines, Bulaong began writing as a freelance writer in school newspapers and various websites. His two novels, released between 2020 and 2021, became influential titles in the gamelit and pop culture fiction genres.[4][5] His works have made him one of the most popular Filipino-Waray writers in modern times.[6]

Biography

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Louis Gabriel Bulaong was born on 1996 in Tacloban, Leyte, in the Philippines.[7] Little is known about his early life besides sharing that he grew up with an interest in history, classical novels, and superhero comics.[8] At around 2012, he applied for cadetship in the Philippine Military Academy.[9] In college, Louis Bulaong studied Bachelor of Science in Psychology at St. Scholastica's College Tacloban. He graduated and received his psychometrician license in 2018.[10]

Bulaong began his writing career as a college journalist, fan fiction blogger, and as a freelance writer for gaming websites like WhatCulture.[8][11][12] He self-published his first book, Escapist Dream, in 2020 with mixed reception. Critics like Peyton F. panned its peculiar writing style, while others such as author Kayla Krantz praised its themes and representation of geek culture.[13][14] A sequel was published a year later entitled Otaku Girl, which was received more positively, with journalist Carl Hannigan praising its improved writing and humor.[2]

Bulaong currently works as a jail officer in his province of Leyte.[8] In 2022, he served as a guest speaker for the "Creative Writing Symposium", a writing seminar and workshop held at the University of the Philippines Tacloban.[15][16]

Writing style

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Books written by Louis Bulaong are known for their geeky humor, themes, and extensive inclusion of pop cultural references taken from various media like popular movies, comic books, anime, video games, and other literature.[4][17][15] Informal writing in the form of slangs, self-references and memes, is a style he predominantly uses, often for comedic purposes.[2] The author also mostly writes in Filipino-English.[18]

Critic Lenny Machowicz commented in his retrospective about Bulaong's use of free flow speech and emotions, stating, "he knows how to write character reflections and emotional moments", while also describing that Bulaong's writing style is "unique" and "creates this smooth flow of thoughts similar to poetry".[17] Derrick St. Claire also praised Bulaong's artistic use of poetic prose, as well as his style of adding deep symbolism in his references.[15]

The themes commonly present in Bulaong's writings are mental health and geek culture.[2] As a psychology graduate, Bulaong tackled issues such as bullying, ostracization, cancel culture, and depression in his stories.[15][19] His novels are filled with geek-centric terminologies and characters consisting of comic nerds, film buffs, gamers, otakus, bookworms, and others.[2]

Recognition

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Several of Louis Bulaong's books have garnered critical acclaim, both locally and internationally. Sam Fletcher called Escapist Dream an "underrated modern classic",[20] while Carl Hannigan described its sequel Otaku Girl as "surrealistic weirdlit at its finest", stating, "[It's] one of the best reflections of modern society today".[2]

Nena Jimenez of Pinas ranked Bulaong at number 2 in her "5 Best Modern Filipino Writers", stating, "He is one of the most versatile and emotionally-driven Filipino writers around."[18] Jake Tatoy from RMN News praised him as one of the most successful Filipino-Waray writers,[6] while Derrick St. Claire of Ezine Articles called Bulaong the "Dean of Pop Culture Fiction".[15]

Awards

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Year Title Award
2018 SSCT Science Achievement Award Winner[15]
2018 SSCT Sulhog Binhi Award Winner[15]
2020 5 Best Modern Filipino Writers by Pinas 2nd place[18]

Bibliography

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[edit]

Other works

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  • Bandido: The Story of the Most Notorious Filipino Gang (2020)[21][7]
  • Dark Folk Tales From The Philippine Countryside (2024)[21]
  • To My Love Love: A Tribute To The Most Wonderful Girlfriend In The World By Her Super Geeky Boyfriend (2024)[21]

References

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  1. ^ Young, Pete (February 19, 2023). "Louis Bulaong". Big Sky Library.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Hannigan, Carl. "Otaku Girl (Book Review): Where Memes and Literature Mix". Voice Media Group. Archived from the original on 2024-08-28. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  3. ^ Adame, Lyn (2021). "A Survey of Authors". University of Southern Mindanao.
  4. ^ a b "5 Best GameLit and LitRPGS That Every Gamers Should Read". Archived from the original on September 27, 2020. Retrieved October 30, 2020. Alt URL
  5. ^ Almond, John (October 30, 2020). "A Closer Look at Video Game-Inspired Books". Gonevis.
  6. ^ a b Tatoy, Jake (June 23, 2021). "USA NGA WARAY, UMARU HIN GANTIMPALA HA AMAZON". RMN News.
  7. ^ a b Bulaong, Louis. Bandido: The Story of the Most Notorious Filipino Gang. August 30, 2020. Afterword, pp. 121–122. ISBN 979-8586961815
  8. ^ a b c Bulaong, Louis. To My Love Love: A Tribute To The Most Wonderful Girlfriend In The World By Her Super Geeky Boyfriend. April 2, 2024. ASIN B0CZS7WHWK
  9. ^ "Results of Philippine Military Academy Entrance Exam (PMAEE) 2012". B.A.B. September 25, 2012.
  10. ^ "2018 Psychometrician Licensure Exam #Louis Bulaong". GMA Network. November 8, 2018.
  11. ^ Paterson, Ewan (October 9, 2017). "Freelance writer, historian and all around geek". What Culture. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  12. ^ Escabel, Gabrielle. "Representative Texts and Authors From Each Region in The Philippines". Scribd. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  13. ^ "52 Book Challenge #2 – Escapist Dream". Peyton Writes. 2021-01-03. Retrieved 2023-09-19.
  14. ^ Krantz, Kayla. "Book Review: Escapist Dream". Krantz. September 28, 2020
  15. ^ a b c d e f g St. Claire, Derrick. "Louis Bulaong: The Dean of Pop Culture Fiction". Ezine Articles. May 12, 2024
  16. ^ Panandigan, Carl Francis (October 25, 2023). "The Current State of Waray-Waray Literature in the Early 21st Century". Leyte Normal University. Retrieved December 12, 2023. p.4
  17. ^ a b "Escapist Dream by Louis Bulaong (A Retrospective)". Archived from the original on October 29, 2020. Retrieved August 9, 2020.
  18. ^ a b c Jimenez, Nena. (September 5, 2020), "5 Best Modern Filipino Writers". Pinas. Excerpt
  19. ^ Bulaong, Louis. Otaku Girl. Afterword. ISBN 9798525774186.
  20. ^ Fletcher, Sam (3 April 2024). "5 Next-Level GameLit Style Novels". Book Notification. April 03, 2024
  21. ^ a b c d e Louis Bulaong (Author of Escapist Dream) Goodreads
  22. ^ a b Ruff, Al Von (2022). "Publisher: Louis Bulaong". Internet Speculative Fiction Database.