AUDIOBOOK

Notes From a Wayward Son

A Memoir

Adrian De Leon
(0)
Duration
10h 13m
Year
2026
Language
English

About

A beautifully crafted, achingly honest memoir about the fraught relationship between Adrian De Leon and his father-a former captain in the Philippines military, a martial arts master and an archbishop-set in 1990s and early 2000s Scarborough.

The first memory Adrian De Leon has of his father is when he is four years old. He is sitting in front of his family home in Manila, Philippines, when he sees a man with a military haircut and a collared shirt ascend the stairs before him. In the aftermath of the Marcos dictatorship in the early 1990s, Tatay-Father-had moved halfway across the world to live in a compound in the Arabian Desert. Despite his pedigree as a military officer and a religious scholarship to study in Manila, the best possible place of employment for a Filipino man who needed sufficient wages to support a family was abroad.

A year later, Tatay uproots his family to Canada, where they start a new life in Scarborough. While Tatay struggles to find steady full-time work, Adrian endeavours to learn English, make friends at his local Catholic school, and assimilate into this new-world neighbourhood made up of Asian, African, and Caribbean immigrant families. Eventually, Adrian's father opens a dojo, where he teaches a little-known Filipino martial art called kuntaw. The dojo becomes a community hub, and the place where Tatay teaches and trains his son. As the family grows with the arrival of his grandmother from the Philippines and a new baby brother, and Adrian becomes a rebellious teenager and young adult, so too does the conflict and tension between father and son.

Acclaimed poet and historian Adrian De Leon has crafted a vivid and visceral journey into the fraught relationship between immigrant fathers and sons set against the backdrop of imperialism and revolution. But, above all, Notes from a Wayward Son is a homage to the fierce love of family and the search for forgiveness. ADRIAN DE LEON is an award-winning writer, poet, critic, and public historian. He has written and edited five books, including most recently, barangay: an offshore poem, which was named one of 2021's best Canadian poetry collections by CBC Books, and two academic works, Bundok: A Hinterland History of Filipino America and Balikbayan: A Revenant History of the Filipino Homeland. With Emmy Award–winning documentary filmmaker Dolly Li, he has partnered with PBS Digital Studies and the Center for Asian American Media to create and co-host two programs, A People's History of Asian America and Historian's Take, which was nominated for an NAACP Image Award and a Daytime Emmy. He was the 2023–2024 Jack and Nancy Farley Distinguished Visiting Scholar in History at Simon Fraser University, and is currently a professor of American and Philippine histories at New York University. He now resides in New York City.

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