For me, this is a great accomplishment because it's the last(!) of my oldest unpublished short stories, not counting a collection about Weird Ronnie [one of which won first prize in Britain] that you might yet read one day. This leaves me with only two newer ones seeking homes in print.
That accomplishment doesn't make me special, but it should send a message to all writers to not give up. To revise. To improve their art. To send stories out. To not give up, no matter how unprivileged you might rightly feel.
The setting that inspired 5-Gashes |
I might be a little
special in the number of genres I've covered: sci-fi, magical realism, fantasy,
alternate-world, detective, children's fable (in Spanish), historical fantasy, fabulism
and horror. You can find out about them online.
Among the twenty-one
authors in this WolfSinger volume will also be stories by Kathleen Alcalá and
bloguero Ernesto Hogan. Closer to publication we'll provide more information,
especially the title, pub date and availability.
I wrote How
Five-Gashes-Tumbling Chaneco Earned the Nickname
as an experimental piece that I call
"cross-genre mestizo/Mexica/alien/Diné/folklore/SF/F."
It's a prosing rollercoaster that blends "Western," Spanish, Indio,
Mexican and mestizo histories in a way that White-Guy-Rides-to-the-Rescue
stories never imagine. It's got Juan de Oñate, Grand Canyon shamans, lost
journalists, pumas and jaguars and, well, you can still get a taste of it, or
wait for the anthology.
From Editor Cynthia Ward about this anthology: "Ah, the
'Western frontier' was full of brave white American pioneer men killing
the native inhabitants, who didn't realize the land they'd occupied for
millennia belonged to the newcomers. It was full of heroic white American
gunmen shooting each other in high noon standoffs or over cattle. Those few
characters who didn't fit the above templates were generally, helpless Mexican
peasants; treacherous Mexican bandits; or the occasional rancher's wife, school
marm, or prostitute. Omitted from the history lessons and the
movies and TV shows were--the whole wide world. For
this anthology, we’re looking for stories about everyone else, stories that
reflect the complex historical realities and diversities of the North American
'Western frontier.' Stories about marginalized and
under-represented groups."
About the editor: "Cynthia Ward writes
science fiction, fantasy, and nonfiction. With Nisi Shawl, she co-authored Writing the Other: A Practical Guide
(Aqueduct Press)."
About the publisher: "WolfSinger Publications is a micro-press company, of on-line
magazines The Lorelei Signal and Sorcerous Signals, as well as the print
compilation, Mystic Signals. WolfSinger also publishes short novels, preferred genres are Science
Fiction and Fantasy, and will consider any genre except erotica and children's."
Caravana 43 coming to your area
The
CARAVANA43 of Ayotzinapa families and students are touring many cities
throughout the U.S. in the coming weeks, telling their stories and experiences
surrounding the disappearance of the 43 Mexican students, presumed murdered.
Caravana43
will travel in three routes, as well as make multiple visits to Washington, DC.
It began March 15 and will continue until the end of April. The first
visit to D.C. is today, March 20th.
The route
is complicated and the information on their site (like the tour itself) is a
work in progress. Here you can find the information--links, emails, phone, dates, sites--to connect to people and events in your community. Please help and
welcome them in whatever ways you can.
– – – – –
Es todo,
hoy, because it's a spring Friday afternoon out on my front patio in Denver, drinking with whoever shows up today to charlar.
RudyG
a.k.a. Chicano spec-lit
author Rudy Ch. Garcia, author of two unpublished short stories--one on time
travel, and the other, a cross-genre mestizo/Mexica/alien/Diné/folklore/SciFi/Fiction
tale
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