Bahay ni Kuya Book 2 is available in Filipino and English translations from Avenida Publishing. Trigger warnings: substance abuse, domestic tension, and depiction of neglect.
Paulito has crafted a work of devastating empathy. It asks no less than this: Can we love those who have failed us, not despite their failures, but within them? And can a house, even one falling apart, still be called home if one person refuses to let go? bahay ni kuya book 2 by paulito
In the sparse yet emotionally dense landscape of contemporary Filipino graphic literature, Paulito’s Bahay ni Kuya Book 2 stands as a haunting sequel that refuses the comfort of resolution. Following the raw, coming-of-age anxieties of the first book, this second volume—rendered in Paulito’s signature scratchy, almost childlike ink lines—transforms the titular “Kuya’s house” from a physical shelter into a metaphysical prison of memory. Bahay ni Kuya Book 2 is available in
Bahay ni Kuya Book 2 has been called “the Ang Pagdadalaga ni Maximo Oliveros of graphic novels” by critic Romi B. Santiago for its tender yet unsentimental portrayal of brotherhood under duress. Others have compared it to Lualhati Bautista’s Dekada ’70 in its quiet documentation of domestic decay as a mirror of national neglect. The book won the 2023 Catholic Mass Media Award for Best Graphic Literature—ironic, given its searing critique of religious hypocrisy (a subplot involves a local priest who evicted a family from church land). It asks no less than this: Can we
Bahay ni Kuya Book 2 by Paulito: The Architecture of Absence and the Ghosts of Kinship