I started reading Isabela a week ago. The novel is easy to read, but the way I resonate with the characters makes it difficult to finish in one sitting.
The characters reminded me of the people I met in the NDMO I was briefly part of—listening to their stories, why and how they chose to become full-time activists, what happened to their comrades who were falsely accused, and those who disappeared.
One of the things I loved most about Isabela is how it offers different perspectives—activists, families, lovers, professors, and ordinary people—woven together into a narrative that shows how personal and political struggles are inseparable. The novel doesn’t just tell one side; it lets you stand in many people’s shoes. It also powerfully portrays feminism, not in an abstract way, but through lived experiences of women navigating love, loss, commitment, and resistance.
Here are some of the quotes I highlighted from the novel:
“Walang pinipiling lugar ang digma, Ka Julia.”
- Prologue, Wounded Woman
“You are these women. You are these women, at one point, in the past, somewhere in the future. In another life.”
- Page 6, Wounded Woman
“Is science democratized?”
- Page 11, Isang
“sun in the knifed horizon bleeds the sky.”
- Page 15, Isang
“There are faces that suffer changes beyond all recognition, no matter how short of a time. Then there are those that possess something, a defining feature maybe, that cannot be altered or aged by time or displacement or any variety of pain.”
- Page 25, Isang
“They knew it wasn’t an easy life they could just step into. It was a lifelong commitment. One that demanded the surrender of your life, your body, your future.”
- Page 52, Issey
“She’s familiar with the resentment and guilt difficult families handed down to their children, as if they put them on this earth only to live the lives they had failed to lice, only to be at their beck and call.”
- Page 55, Issey
“It gets better. Always. With time.”
- Page 57, Issey (not the exact quote sorry)
“Carlos put the ring on her again for the second time, after death, when there’s nothing to part with anymore.”
- Page 60, Issey
“They were mothers, and they knew what it was like to lose a child to the hills.”
- Page 68, Ka Abel
“They say rebels are not born, they are made, they are taught and trained. But I was born one, because I was born poor.”
- Page 68, Ka Abel
“A lot of people think that being up in the hills is all gunfire and fight; sometimes, there’s sweetness too.”
- Page 74, Ka Abel
“When the conversation on marriage fell upon their shoulders, they born agreed to it like they were simply agreeing that the answer was indeed yes, instead of no.”
- Page 87, Sabel
“When you love someone, you can stand it.”
- Page 92, Sabel
“The crisis of the nation then was personal. It was in everybody’s bones, it coursed through everybody’s lives, even in the most intimate parts of it.”
- Page 112, Belay
“My father and I, we don’t say sorry. In this house that was just the two of us, we don’t say I love you. Instead of saying it’s not your fault, he made my favorite bulalo. And instead of the usual red rice that I often complained about, there was a fluffy white rice that had never tasted better to me than that evening. I could have said something, I suppose, but just before I could open my mouth to say not to worry, to say it’s okay, everything is fine, he delicately asked me if the meat was soft enough. I nodded fiercely. Because it really was, almost like Mama had cooked it herself.”
- Page 142, Celine and Lou-Lou Belle
“Perhaps she knew she needed to pass down the knowledge before it was too late. She must’ve known.”
- Page 182, Wounded Woman
“We don’t have wineglasses unpacked, so we’ll have to make do.”
- Page 194, Wounded Woman
“Here in the backlands of Isabela, it meant finding an alternative: route, napkin, sooled bandage over an amputated leg. There was always another way. It meant going on and on and on, despite, despite, despite. I learned first hand that this was activism. This was what it meant to be committed.”
- Page 194, Wounded Woman