Shirley Siaton
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[edit] Shirley O. Siaton
Shirley Siaton is primarily identified as a fiction and poetry writer as well as journalist based in the Republic of the Philippines. However, she is officially credited in literary bylines as Shirley O. Siaton.
She is best known for the Center series that ran in MOD Filipina magazine, stories that chronicled the lives of members of a fictional Filipino pop-rock band.
[edit] Awards and Credits
In 1996, she was the champion of the Regional Secondary Schools Press Conference English Editorial contest and the silver medallist of the same category at the National level. She is also a recipient of the National Philippine Information Agency IWAG Award for Excellence in Journalism and the much-coveted Esteban Javellana Award for Creative Writing, both given in 1997.
Majority of her fiction works have been published in Philippine magazines such as MOD Filipina and Glitter. Her poetry was showcased in several issues of The Philippine Star, a national newspaper. She also had a stint as a columnist of Files Magazine, the weekly magazine of Panay News.
[edit] Writings
These are Shirley Siaton's works, grouped by publication and by no means comprehensive:
Files Magazine
1. Telltale: The Oasis (23-29 January 1998)
2. Telltale: A Few Good Books (16-22 January 1998)
3. Telltale: Random Collisions (19-25 December 1997)
Glitter Magazine
1. Hobo (16-31 January 1996)
MOD Filipina Magazine
1. Blue Sunset (5 and 12 March 1999)-Center Series
2. Rivals (26 February 1999)-Center Series
3. The One (4 September 1998)-Center Series
4. Leaving the Mountain (21 August 1998)
5. Fires (27 June 1997)
6. Storms (24 January 1997)
The Philippine Star
1. Other (13 November 1998)
2. Foodcourt (18 September 1998)
3. Fudge (24 October 1997)
4. Who Cares (15 August 1997)
5. Shoes (19 July 1997)
6. Stone (3 May 1997)
7. Graduation Day (12 April 1997)
8. Passengers (30 November 1996)
She is also credited as the author of 2 Filipino stageplays, Tatsulok (Triangle) and Gisi (Torn), both staged at the University of the Philippines Iloilo City campus in 1999.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
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