Pag Susulatan nang Dalauang Binibini na si Urbana at ni Feliza by Modesto de Castro
'Pag Susulatan nang Dalauang Binibini na si Urbana at ni Feliza' sounds like a mouthful, right? But trust me, this wonky-loving book from 1864 is pure gold. Modesto de Castro sold out back then, and honestly, if someone kidnapped a modern copy, I’d track them down. Let me break it down for you—without boring you.
The Story
This story is literally just a collection of letters between two sisters. Urbana stays in the quiet town, begging for wisdom from her sister Feliza, who’s chilling in Manila. Every letter is a tug between tradition and being bold. Feliza has a strict answer for everything: 'don’t laugh too loud,' 'modesty rules,' and 'only read proper romance.' But guess what? Urbana keeps writing back with sneaky hopes and sharp questions that show she’s tired of living small. There’s no evil villain or car chase—just the quiet defiance of a woman wanting more. And honestly? That’s WAY more intense.
Why You Should Read It
First off—it’s basically the original advice column with shimmering veins of resistance. De Castro wrote for everyone (common people even spoke like this—in Tagalog!), so you’ll feel 1820s drama fresh. Here’s where it gets me: The push between Feliza (upholding survival masking virtue) and Urbana (secret rileys for freedom) hits heavy today. We know colonizers absolutely wreck the Philippines on men and faith; debuts want such perfect daughter ladies. Woven between courtship tips lies sister love, self-hatred over wearing make-up or aiming for a career (women briefly had options). Honestly, it makes you root for Urbana floating in those rickety rules but desperate a piece of independence. So so valid even in our time.
Final Verdict
Alright, grab this book if: ✅ You think you hate classics or reading (‘cause it read swift and loud!). ✅ You love found family-style sister bonds you bite into like sour mango at night. ✅ Upset how history kept women back? Man, de Castro SHOWED with care, and messy edges. This gem isn’t The I-Have-to-Three-Charles-Dickens-Ok-Board collection—way more rawer feel good cry good storytelling. Best for teens teasing writing, feminist readers waking to Philippine colonial songs, or anyone needing old letters that yank laughs shuds real tears. Don’t let ‘1864’ scare you; open like catching letter behind drawer older time—exactly now interesting.
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