Matt de la Peña YA workshop. Quiñones, the journalist. Picacio's Lotería artwork. Kick-ass Latino noir. Will Big Book include Latino spec authors? PoC Time-travel anthology.
Matt de la Peña. YA & children's books author
I'll soon review Matt de la Peña's The Living, a plot-driven YA thriller
that was total, Bam! Bam! Bam! If I were younger, I would've read Living in one night. Matt's one of the
few spec-authors who feature Chicano protagonists in their books. In the
meantime, here's a note from Matt about a Sept. workshop that will
quickly fill up.
Advanced
Writer Weekend Workshop:
Digging
Deep: Exploring Narrative and Character Depth
with novelists Matt de la Peña and Margo Rabb
Sept. 24-27, 2015
Matt de la Peña is the author of six critically-acclaimed
young adult novels (including Mexican
WhiteBoy, The Living
and The Hunted) and two
award-winning picture books (A Nations Hope
and Last Stop on Market Street).
A long weekend of lectures, craft
exercises, and workshop in Austin, Texas. Matt's workshop is entitled: The
Magic of Narrative Balance: Showing Patience and Restraint in Writing for
Children and Young Adults.
"In this workshop we will discuss the
author/reader relationship and reader psychology and the function of the
narrator in novel writing. How and when do we back off and allow the characters
to drive scenes and conversations? When do we the thrust the narrator forward?
We will break it down using examples a wide range of published work."
If interested, you should apply today.
Sam
Quiñones, journalist, novelist and ??
Primo journalist and chignón novelist Sam Quiñones
wouldn't call himself a hero. It's such a cheap term now--used to describe over
1.6 million armed, U.S. employees--I won't call him that. But for years this
Chicano has investigated, interviewed and written about Border issues that get
Mexican journalists disappeared or assassinated. So, you pick the term you feel
describes him. Quiñones recently sent us this about his article: Boxer Enriquez, the Mexican Mafia, LAPD – What’s the
problem?
"There’s been a dust-up recently over a
meeting that LAPD investigators held with Rene “Boxer”
Enriquez, a former influential member of the Mexican Mafia prison gang, in
which he explained to them the inner workings of his former crime pals.
"Why would you not want a former Mexican Mafia
member to be educating police brass on the workings of one of the most
influential, and little-known, institutions in Southern California life today? I’ve interviewed Boxer Enriquez extensively. That’s
what he does, and, an articulate fellow, he does it pretty well. He’s co-author
of the book, The Black Hand.
"Far from being a 'giant waste,' this seems to
me to be essential work. The Mexican Mafia is Southern California’s first
regional organized crime syndicate, one of the most important institutions in
Southern California, particularly in communities with large Latino populations
and gang problems." [Read the entire article here.]
"Also, the new Tell Your True Tale; East Los Angeles book is out, the product of a
workshop I did with a great group of eight new writers. Their stories are again
fantastic — about Albert Einstein in East L.A.; a Czech 'almost blind' boy
growing up in a Communist boarding home; a young man going to Tijuana to help a
deported friend return; a woman on her deathbed remembering the last time she
saw her kids; and a girl on her way to Mexico, a child bride. Check it out, on sale at Amazon.com for only $5.38
hardcopy or $2.99 as an ebook.
"My next
Tell Your True Tale workshop begins Saturday, Jan. 31, at 10:30 a.m. at the
East Los Angeles Public Library, in the Chicano Resource Center. I hope to soon
expand them, with the county library's support, to Compton, South L.A. and
elsewhere."
John
Picacio, spec-lit artista
Two weeks ago, I wrote about a "taste of what is
happening in the world of Latino speculative writers." The opportunities
for Latino spec continue, like from Chicano artist John Picacio, a San
Anto, Tex. homie who went spec-viral.
Picacio won the Hugo Award for Best Professional
Artist in 2012 and 2013 for his illustration in science fiction, fantasy, and
horror. His accolades include the World Fantasy Award, the Locus Award, five
Chesley Awards, and two International Horror Guild Awards, all in the Artist category.
I have his Calavera poster in my living room and wish I could cover my rincón
with the others, like the Sirena below. Here's news from Juan:
Many people have requested that I make my Loteria Grande cards available for
online sale -- and to produce new ones. I worked until the last day of 2014 to
produce new artwork and cards -- and that last push has now paid
off because they're now available! Supplies are limited.
Here's purchase details for The Loteria Grande Once Set of eleven cards,
only available until Wed., Feb. 4th. I'll be actively posting on my new blog,
the Lone Boy website, and here's the first post with more details on today's
product announcement.
In Loteria We Trust,
For years, Daniel José Older has been rising
in the spec-fiction world, getting stories published in Strange
Horizons, Flash Fiction, Crossed Genres, and The Innsmouth Free Press, even though others have ignored him. Whatever
kind of Latino he is, the dude's first novel is going to burn up U.S. spec literature, much
like Junot Díaz scorched "literary" fiction with his novels.
I mentioned him two weeks ago and am now halfway through his Half-Resurrection
Blues, the first in his Bone Street Rumba urban fantasy series. I can already say: You. Should. Read. It. It's more than horror or noir. More than spec mystery. And definitely Latino. I don't how he performs in public, but
if he shows up in Colo., I'll be there. His first novel is one page after another of 21st Century
prose, and not regular "horror." I'll leave the rest for later, but
here's a note from the writer that Publishers Weekly hailed as a “rising star of the genre, striking
and original.”
"I'm so excited to announce the release of my
first novel, Half-Resurrection Blues, about a half-dead
hitman in Brooklyn trying to uncover the secret behind his mysterious life and
death. Order it here." You can read about him.
How many
Latino stories by us will The Big Book of
Science Fiction contain?
Best-Book lists and anthologies of "the
best" repeatedly come out with few or zero Latino authors. All we can do on
our end, besides write great stories, is jump on opportunities that appear.
Whether the gate-keepers let us in is of course another story. But here's an
invitation from Jeff VanderMeer and Ann VanderMeer. They are editing The Big
Book of Science Fiction for Vintage and are soliciting suggestions until
the end of March for a massive
anthology of more than 500,000 words,
scheduled for 2016 publication.
"The Big Book of Science Fiction will contain
short stories originally published during the period 1900 to 2000,
any work of fiction under 10,000 words. Works under 6,000 words will have
the best chance. We define “science fiction” very broadly, from realistic hard
SF all the way to surreal material with a science fiction flavor.
This includes what might be called “science fiction myths.” However, we do not
define SF as including traditional stories about ghosts, zombies,
werewolves, vampires, unicorns, etc.
"We are very interested in international SF
originally written in English and in existing translations of
international SF originally published in a language other than English. We will
commission a limited number of new translations and would love recommendations
if you read in a language other than English and have encountered a
mind-blowing story. We have translator resources in place already."
If you're a Latino who's written such stories, get the word out to your fans. Latinos' stories will not make the cut if the
readers do not suggest any. Check out the details.
La Bloga received a request to spread this news:
Co-editor, Heidi Durrow (NYT best-selling author of
The Girl Who Fell From the Sky) and I
are putting together an anthology about Time Travel. Have you ever wanted to
time travel? It sounds fun, unless you're from an under-represented community
and then it might be not only NOT fun, but downright dangerous. Imagine being
Japanese American during World War II, mixed during slavery or in the Jim Crow
South, or LGBTQ, well, at any point in our history.
We are looking for writers to submit proposals for
short stories (5–10 thousand words) featuring a character from an under-represented
community, traveling to some time period before this one. And that's where you
come in. We were hoping you could help spread the word to all of your writers
and contacts. Please send proposals or questions to: Time.Traveling.4.All.of.Us ALA gmail.com.
Deadline for proposals is Feb. 14, 2015. Details on the flyer.
Sincerely,
Koji Steven Sakai [Koji’s debut novel, Romeo & Juliet Vs. Zombies, will be
released by the fantasy imprint of Zharme Publishing Press in 2015.
Alfredo
Vea – un chisme
An Internet rumor going around regarding spec genres:
"I just read a manuscript by Alfredo Vea that's going to blow the roof off
that subject when Oklahoma University Press publishes the novel."
Es todo, hoy, but debe ser
suficiente,
RudyG, not a rising Chicano spec
author, apparently more like, floating
Excellent post! So many great things happening with great writers. By the way, my interview with Daniel José Older about his new novel runs this Monday on La Bloga.
ReplyDeleteI admire Sam Quinoñes very much. He does important investigative work in our communities. I highly recommend his book, Antonio's gun and Delfino's dream.
ReplyDeleteGreat column
Simón, Liz. Every Chicano should read him. Every Anglo, too. He's a Sentinel straddling the border. With the ganas and guts of the youth. - RudyG
ReplyDelete