Saturday, August 31, 2013
GET PHYSICAL ON A DIFFERENT FRONTIER
Good news dead-tree fans! You can now get We See a Different Frontier as an old-fashioned, physical book, as well as a newfangled ebook! Go postcolonial now! Pancho Villa's Flying Circus included!
Friday, August 30, 2013
CHICANONAUTICA DRINKS TO PANCHO VILLA ON A DIFFERENT FRONTIER
The
current Chicanonautica over at La Bloga is in honor of my story
Pancho Villa's Flying Circus
appearing in the new anthology We See a Different Frontier: A Postcolonial Speculative Fiction Anthology
edited by Fábio Fernandes and Djibril al-Ayad, and featuring stories
by writers from all over the planet . . . and that I didn't know that
Pancho didn't drink.
How
was I to know? People name drinks after him:
And
their bars:
His
troops were known to smoke and sing about marijuana:
But
he did have aircraft, just not airships:
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
TWO ERNESTO STORIES AVAILABLE!
Look out world, two of my stories are freshly available:
My postcyberpunk lucha libre noir tale Novaheads is in Super Stories of Heroes and Villains.
And Pacho Villa's Flying Circus, an alternate history, postcolonial spaghetti western is in We See a Different Frontier.
Buy 'em, read 'em, enjoy 'em!
Friday, August 16, 2013
CHICANONAUTICA REVIEWS THE QUIXOTE CULT
I review
Genaro González' novel about Chicano Militants, The Quixote Cult
this time on Chicanonautica over at La Bloga.
Becoming
Chicano usually starts with a revelation:
And
Chicano militancy can get funny:
But
seriously:
So,
where are they now?
And don't forget who we are:
Thursday, August 8, 2013
DELL HARRIS AND THE AMAZING HIGH AZTECH E-COVER
The
original Tor cover for High Aztech was
good, but I also considered it a little bland. The colorful
razzle-dazzle of my Aztecan future was muted into the the sort of
military-industrial sci-fi that's supposed to be do damn commercial.
Folks expecting nerd lit were confused. Seekers of postcolonial gonzo
splendor had no way of knowing.
The
Mandarin cover was better, though the gold breast plate is
actually Mixtec, not Aztec, but most folks probably can't tell the
difference.
I was
tempted to do the cover for the ebook myself, but wasn't sure what to
do – then I saw Dell Harris' painting Scorpio.
It's
like a scene form High Aztech
come to life. I couldn't think of another image as the cover. So I
bought the rights from Dell.
I
must admit, it's better than anything I could have done.
And
from the copyright notice, it was painted in 1990 – when I was
working on High Aztech.
Dell and I must have been thinking along the same lines.
Dell
and I also go way back together. We both broke into science fiction
in the March, 1982 issue of Amazing Stories
thanks to editor Elinor Mavor, who had the courage to buy my
outrageous story and the vision have Dell illustrate it. Dell,
Elinor, and I were pioneers of Afrofuturism.
That
table of contents not only includes my first published short story
and a detail of Dell's illustration, but Harlan Ellison, A.E. Van
Vogt, and Barry N. Malzberg.
The
Rape of Things to Come is probably too much for today's tender
sensibilities and politically-correct doctrines – and it did offend
people at the time.
Dell's
reaction was:
"This
is Wild!" This wasn't like the science fiction I grew up
reading. This had a different vibe to it that was refreshing. I
totally enjoyed trying to translate the characters from Ernest's
text, hoping that I captured its raw tone. I couldn't have asked for
a better baptism into the world of science fiction illustration.
Looking
back, I stand by it – what I was doing was groping for Afrofuturism
and postcolonialism, and punching back at the alarms and defense
mechanisms that go off whenever I set foot in territories that some
some fools still in 2013 think are the domain of white people.
That has
been a major theme in my work – and life. In the next few months,
stories of mine will be in Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond, We See a Different Frontier, and one
featuring a Chicano superhero in Super Stories of Heroes and Villains.
The
struggle goes on.
Friday, August 2, 2013
CHICANONAUTICA SEES STORM CLOUDS OVER ARIZONA
Chicanonautica
looks to the sky – and the political climate of Arizona at the La Bloga.
Death
threats ain't gonna stop Sheriff Joe:
Don't
worry, Johns McCain and Kyl are on the job:
And
remember, this is Indian country:
Meanwhile,
back in the future: