Every
summer, my wife (author of Medusa Uploaded)
and I, and her mother take a road trip to New Mexico, and other
nearby states. The Southwest. AKA, the Wild West. I like to think of
it as Aztlán. I keep on the lookout for signs of the world that
existed before the coming of tract housing, strip malls, and other
air-conditioned delusions. It can often be found in the wide-open
post-apocalyptic landscapes, with the ancient ruins, postmodern ghost
towns, and roadside datura.
I
was glad to see that some of the murals on crumbling structures had
been touched up--there were even some new ones. Last year they were
all looking neglected, and I was afraid that another interesting
cultural development was disintegrating under the current
political/economic environment. I should have known, outlaw art
doesn’t die easy.
Emily’s
mom asked about a “traditional Mexican restaurant,” but there
weren’t any to be found. There weren’t any Mexicans to be seen. I
was the closest anybody came, and the white tourists speaking
Germanic or Scandinavian languages looked at me with my brown skin and bandido moustache as if I were part of
the kitschy decor.
We
had better luck in Parowan (a Native word meaning “evil water” .
. . hmm), a town on the Old Spanish Trail, from the pre-Anglo days.
Right on the Trail was La Villa, touted as a Lozano
restaurant--lozano
meaning
sexy, romantic, hot, gorgeous, but also elegant, haughty, or
arrogant. To our delight, it was an old-fashioned place with good
Mexican food made by Mexicans. Emily’s mom approved.
In
Bluff, near the Four Corners, but still in Utah, we enjoyed Navajo
tacos in the Twin Rocks Cafe. It’s was founded in 1880, built on the
ruins of a pueblo that archeologists estimate dates back to 650 A.D.
In the Big Rez, Navajos seems to be taking over the town, which is a
good thing.
"It
feels good to be surrounded by people who speak my
Spanish,”
said Emily’s mom, who in Utah, tried to talk to the Indians in
Spanish, and got only puzzled looks.
Ernest Hogan, contributor to the American Book Award winning Altermundos,
took a lot of pictures and notes while vacationing in Aztlán. He
will be blogging about it at Mondo Ernesto soon.
3 comments:
Ernest, thanks for putting us right there with you. In a way, I felt like I was reading science fiction, as the past, language and people, are nearly gone.
Oh man, I DIG this landscape and your descriptions of it. Every time I drive through New Mexico it calls to me. Too expensive for me to live there I imagine. But it's so inspirational!
Been a while since I've been home. These are some places I haven't checked out. Thanks for posting.
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