Edgar G. Villan

Biography

A college teacher in the Philippines married with 3 kids all of school age. A teacher of psychology and social science with an engineering background. Interested in Spirituality, Philosophy, Theology, Astronomy and the Social Sciences.

Where to find Edgar G. Villan online

Books

The Lived Experiences: Commuter, Teacher, Vendor
Price: $2.99 USD. Words: 6,140. Language: English. Published: April 12, 2016 . Categories: Nonfiction » Social Science » Ethnic studies, Nonfiction » Inspiration » Personal inspiration
This is a qualitative, auto-ethnographic research in three (3) distinct roles: commuter, teacher and vendor
Heartfelt and Versified
You set the price! Words: 1,260. Language: English. Published: October 15, 2015 . Categories: Fiction » Inspirational
These are poems that I wrote and collected --many of them made several years ago. This was the time when I still had the touch (and maybe the nerve) to versify my feelings in the English language. Lately I stopped making poems in English. I concentrated on Filipino (Tagalog) poetry.
Some Freudian Remorse
Price: $0.99 USD. Words: 390. Language: English. Published: October 7, 2015 . Categories: Fiction » Inspirational
A story which can either be told in a psychoanalyst's couch or in a priest's confessional. It can be a play of characters or a description of real life activity in Manila, Philippines.
Yearning For God
You set the price! Words: 1,530. Language: English. Published: September 25, 2015 . Categories: Essay » Literature
These are short, un-organized, spontaneous insights and prayers most probably brought about by a person who may have released himself in God's mercy. This does not amount for any philosophical or theological treatise but expressions of emotional honesty.
A Teacher's Rants Enriched With Some Insights
Price: Free! Words: 910. Language: English. Published: September 23, 2015 . Categories: Nonfiction » Education & Study Guides » Teaching
This is a highly opinionated personal narrative of a Catholic college teacher in the Philippines. It reflects the feelings and reactions that I believe is shared by many of colleagues in the tertiary teaching profession in the Philippines.