PALH BOOK REVIEWS

DOGEATERS
by Jessica Hagedorn
published by Penguin, ISBN 014014904X, softcover, reissued July 1991Review by Publishers Weekly, Feb. 9, 1990 v237 n6 p43(1), by Sybil Steinberg
Copyright 1990 Cahners Business InformationBorn and raised in the Philippines, poet and playwright Hagedorn sets her first novel in the volatile political climate of that country's recent past. Although in many respects a thinly disguised roman a clef, the book succeeds on the strength of its characterization. hagedorn (Dangerous Music) weaves together the immature impressions of Rio Gonzaga, a spunky well-to-do Manilan schoolgirl whose life is influenced as much by the movies and radio serials as the tsimis (gossip) of her large extended family, with the voices of Joey, a popular DJ and male prostitute; Rainer, a world-weary German film director being honored with a retrospective; and the Philippine's astonishingly candid First Lady, addressed only as Madame, among others. Hagedorn's unflinching view of Manila, encompassing child prostitution, the torture chambers and the slums, as well as the palatial quarters of the First Family, is leavened by ironic, often humourous observations. When the popular opposition leader is slain, each of the characters is directly affected; for some it is a moral awakening, for others the beginning of the end of a stranglehold on power.
Review Grade: B
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