But Bong is not a hero. He is preachy, judgmental, and hypocritical. He lectures the juke joint dancers about dignity while secretly desiring them. Bautista cleverly uses Bong to critique —the kind that speaks for the poor but never listens to them. 3. Tere – The Heart of the Darkness Tere is a prostitute. But Bautista refuses to reduce her to a victim. Tere is the most complex character: sharp, humorous, weary, and heartbreakingly lucid. She knows the Navy men’s names, their wives’ names back in Kansas, their fetishes, and their lies.
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Set in Olongapo City—once the rest-and-recreation capital for the U.S. Naval Base at Subic Bay—the novel is not just a story. It is an autopsy of a city built on vice, and a eulogy for children born between two flags, belonging to neither. The novel unfolds through three alternating narrators, each a “Gapo” native, each a different face of the same wound. 1. Mando – The Bastard Son of History Mando is a young mistisa —fair-skinned, blue-eyed, unmistakably American in features, yet purely Filipino in poverty. His mother, a former bar girl named Puring, was abandoned by his U.S. Navy father, who never even knew he existed. gapo ni lualhati bautista buong kwento