His acclaimed novel,
The Umbrella Country, published in 1999 by
Random House was included in
Booklist Top Ten First Novels of 1999. Upon release, the novel reached the #2 spot in the
Philippines.
The Umbrella Country was also a nominee for the
Barnes & Noble Discover Great Writers Award 1999 and a recipient of the first Asian American "Members' Choice" Literary Award in the year 2000. According to
The New York Times Book Review, "Realuyo's lucid prose, unencumbered by sentimentality or hindsight, lends freshness to the conflicts of his somewhat familiar characters and color to a setting both impoverished and alluring." The
San Francisco Chronicle called
Umbrella Country, "a significant contribution to Filipino American literature." Realuyo's first novel was also highly acclaimed in his home country, the Philippines, and has continued to be taught in colleges and universities since its publication in 1999. In a
Manila Standard review, This is a dangerous book because it reveals the Filipino soul, tortured, tormented by poverty . . . Everything in this book has the sting of reality. The images are stunning but true. The smells are so strong they assault the reader. The people are familiar characters we have met in the comings and goings, ups and downs of our city lives: They may be stereotypes and archetypes, but you know them all, they were part of each of our past and they're still very much around, 30 years after Gringo's recollection.Realuyo's first poetry collection,
The Gods We Worship Live Next Door, won the 2005
Agha Shahid Ali Prize in Poetry, selected by Grace Schulman, professor of English at City University of New York and poetry editor of
The Nation. It was released by the
University of Utah Press in March 2006. The Philippine edition of
The Gods We Worship Live Next Door was released by Anvil Press in the Philippines in March 2008, marking his very first book publication in his birth country.
The Gods We Worship Live Next Door received a 2009
Philippine National Book Award. In 2019, the Irish band
U2 featured his poem "Filipineza" in its 30th anniversary concert tour of
The Joshua Tree in Manila. In Spring 2000, he guest edited
The Literary Review special issue on contemporary Filipino and Filipino-American literature,
Am Here: Contemporary Filipino Writings in English. He is also the editor of
The NuyorAsian Anthology: Asian American writings about New York City, a collection commemorating 100 years of Asian American presence in New York City. The anthology was published by the
Asian American Writers' Workshop and
Temple University Press in 1999.
The NuyorAsian Anthology is a collection of fiction, poetry, essays, and art. The anthology maps Asian American life in New York City, beginning with works by poet Jose Garcia Villa in the 1930s and the birth of the Asian-American literary and political movement in the 1970s. The collection also explores the more contemporary voices of
Pico Iyer, Bharati Mukherjee, Henry Chang, Xu Xi, Maxine Hong Kingston, Kimiko Hahn, Vijay Seshadri, Betty T. Kao, Wang Ping, and many others. Ranging in age from 16 to 87, more than sixty writers and artists look at love and loss, work and history, identity and sexuality, loneliness and dislocation, giving a closer look at the most diverse ethnic community in the United States. Realuyo began his writing through his plays and poetry in elementary school in Manila, where he wrote in his native language Pilipino (Tagalog), but later shifted to English when his family immigrated to the United States when he was a teenager. Since co-founding
Asian American Writers' Workshop in 1991, he has been publishing in literary journals, magazines and anthologies in the United States including
The Nation,
Mānoa: A Pacific Journal of International Writing,
North American Review,
ZYZZYVA's Resistance Issue,
The Literary Review,
Mid-American Review,
The Missouri Review,
New Letters, and
The Kenyon Review. The opening poem in
The Gods We Worship Live Next Door, Filipineza, originally published in
The Nation, is widely anthologized in collections, such as the Norton Anthology
Language for a New Century and
Fire in the Soul: 100 Poems for Human Rights. The poem's inclusion in
U2 The Joshua Tree anniversary concert tour received much media attention and highlighted the plight of Filipino domestics in Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. == Background ==