Lina Espina-Moore
Encyclopedia
Lina Espina-Moore (May 20, 1919 – 2000) was a Cebuano
Cebuano language
Cebuano, referred to by most of its speakers as Bisaya , is an Austronesian language spoken in the Philippines by about 20 million people mostly in the Central Visayas. It is the most widely spoken of the languages within the so-named Bisayan subgroup and is closely related to other Filipino...

 writer.

She was born in Toledo
Toledo City
Toledo City, formerly known as Pueblo Hinulawan, is a 2nd class city in the province of Cebu, Philippines. Population as of 2007 census: 152,960....

, Cebu
Cebu
Cebu is a province in the Philippines, consisting of Cebu Island and 167 surrounding islands. It is located to the east of Negros, to the west of Leyte and Bohol islands...

, the fifth child and second daughter of Yrinea Regner and Gerundio Espina. Her formative academic years were spent at the Cebu Central School and at the Cebu Intermediate High School. She then graduated from the Southern Colleges with an Associate of Arts degree. A brief stint as a law student at Far Eastern University in Manila was followed by a job as a cub reporter for the Manila Times
Manila Times
The Manila Times is the oldest existing English language newspaper in the Philippines. It is published daily by The Manila Times Publishing Corp. with editorial and administrative offices at 371 A...

.

Among her awards are the Philippines Free Press Literary Award for 1994, when she won first prize in the short story contest and for her “outstanding contribution to Philippine arts and letters.” She was also the “unanimous choice” by the Creative Writing Center at the University of the Philippines
University of the Philippines
The ' is the national university of the Philippines. Founded in 1908 through Act No...

 for the 1995-96 National Fellowship in Literature, an honor she couldn’t accept because of health reasons.

Along with other female reporters, Espina established the Philippine Association of Women Writers (PAWW) in 1950. While in this group, Espina’s Just Like A Dream was published in the Graphic; it was her first fiction piece to see the light of day in a regionally-circulated magazine. This was followed by the Sunday Times Magazine’s publication of her Timeless Waters. While more of her stories began making the rounds of other magazines, Espina flitted from one writing job to the next, running the gamut of editorial work, ghost writing and public relations. With many writing successes in English under her belt, Espina decided to pen manuscripts in her native Cebuano and send these to Liwayway Publications’ Cebuano magazine Bisaya.

Previous awards include: Outstanding Achievement in the Field of English Literature from the Province of Cebu (1975), Pan Pacific Southeast Asian Association Award in the Field of the English Novel (1975), Magsusulat Award for Exemplary Contribution to Literature in Cebuano (1987), and the much-esteemed Thailand Southeast Asian Write Award presented by HRH Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn for her novel Heart of the Lotus in 1989. In 1992 she received both the Women in Travel Award in the Field of Literature and the Literary Award from the Mariano F. Manguerra Foundation.

In 1960, Espina married Climpson S. "Kip" Moore, manager of a lumber company in the Cordilleras. The couple made their home in Mt Data until Kip Moore's death in 1977. During her stay there, Espina-Moore wrote about tribal minorities. She resided in Alabang, Metro Manila, but moved to her hometown Cebu in recent years to be with her son and his family.

Lina Espina-Moore died in 2000, and to fulfil a promise to Lina, Edna Zapanta Manlapaz wrote Austregelina: A Story of Lina Espina Moore's Life and Selected Works.

SHe wrote three novels: The Heart of the Lotus, A Lion In The House, and The Honey, The Locust. Her short stories are found in two collections: Cuentos, and Choice.

External links and other sources

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