Angelo R. Lacuesta has won many awards for his writing, among them three Philippine National Book Awards, the Madrigal Gonzalez Best First Book Award, the NVM Gonzalez Award, and numerous Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards and Philippines Graphic Awards. He has written several books, including five short story collections, two non-fiction books, and a collection of graphic stories. He has participated in many international literary residencies, fellowships, festivals and conferences. He is Editor-at-Large at Esquire Magazine (Philippines) and is a member of the Board of the Philippine Centre of PEN International (Poets, Essayists, Novelists). He lives in Manila with his wife and son.
"""Angelo R. Lacuesta has the rare gift of all true literary artists. He creates characters and narratives that illuminate the universal quest for an answer to the great and enduring question of our existence: Who am I? Joy is a brilliant exploration of this great theme. Lacuesta weaves the four principle lives in the book seamlessly together as they ache for self. I have long been an ardent fan of Lacuesta's short stories. Joy now reveals him as a master of the novel form, as well."" --Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize laureate, author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain ""With a seductive prose that is at once utterly convincing and devastating in its palpable longing, Lacuesta delivers a subtle yet powerful story of love, absent fathers, killer robots, ad campaigns, and anthems. In the process, he demonstrates through a time-and-continent- leaping storyline that the connections we make with others are always contingent, negotiable, and all the more beautiful for their impermanence."" --Robin Hemley, author of The Art and Craft of Asian Stories: A Writer's Guide and Anthology(with Xu Xi) and Oblivion, an After Autobiography ""From these heap of remembrances--a teen-dream birthday at the InterContinental Manila, pomelo rinds on a coffee table in Davao, the English theme song of a Japanese super robot cartoon, blurry late-night Skype calls with an old friend in New York--Lucas emerges. Joy narrates life as a series of events whose sum, whether beautiful or miserable, frustrating or utterly joyful, is up to you."" --Tatler Asia ""The story resonates with truth and throbs with nostalgia for those who were born in the 1960s, kids in the '70s, and teens in the '80s. This is the story of a Filipino Gen-Xer, much like Lacuesta and myself. ... Lacuesta's writing style is engaging and spry, it flows and draws you in, and will have you flipping pages until the wee hours. JOY is exactly that."" --Jenny Ortuoste, manilastandard.net"