by Ernest Hogan
Emily and I had been trying to sneak out of Phoenix for months. We finally managed to do it the day after Christmas.
Flags were at half-staff across Arizona. I can't keep
track about what it's for anymore. Maybe the government shutdown.
Maybe we should leave them like that until the administration
self-destructs.
Meanwhile, electric signs flashed: GRAND CANYON IS OPEN
TRAVEL SAFELY.
Our room at the Matterhorn Inn in Sedona had a
spectacular view of the red rock mountains, and their fantastic,
slow-motion, light and shadow show, not to mention Venus rising in
the morning.
Most of the restaurants were closed on Christmas, but we
did find Los Rosales Authentic Mexican food in what Emily called the
“multicultural part of Sedona.” It was a family/neighborhood place.
Sedona is getting barrio. Good. Remember that barrio
means neighborhood, not ghetto.
Emily an I taste salsa the way other taste wine “Not bad
. . . A hint of lime . . . Flavorful rather than hot . . . Wait! . .
. The spices sneak up on on you . . .”
When I first moved to Arizona, back in the
Nineteen-Eighties. Sedona was so Anglo that it felt like I as
scouting for an affirmative action program when I went there.
Now it's less of a safe place for lotus-eating white people to buy
high-priced spirituality products and more of Wild West Disneyland
with lots of brown and Asian tourists. You hear Spanish spoken along
the main drag.
What a brave new world . . .
We ate at some of our favorite restaurants, and did some
hiking at Red Rock State park.
All the while, I contemplated 2019, how it may
outperform 2018 on all fronts, and what it means to be a Chicano
science fiction writer in these tumultuous times. There have been
opportunities, even though mainstream publishing still treats me like
I'm on probation. My growing reputation at universities will come in
handy. I have projects to finish, and deals to pursue.
And then there's all those unexpected things that keep
popping up.
Meanwhile, news keeps leaking in about the threats to
close down the border.
Will the electric signs soon flash: THE BORDER IS CLOSED
TRAVEL SAFELY?
Life gets more rasquache sci-fi every day. Somehow, I
manage to keep ahead of it in my writing.
As we left Sedona, clouds brushed the mountain tops. We
ran into snow flurries in Jerome.
In 2019, Ernest Hogan is going to struggle to finish
a novel about a Chicano science fiction writer dealing with a singularity
that's crazier than anybody imagined.
2 comments:
Wishing you good times ahead!
Thanks, Javier! I don't know how the robots got in. Guess it's gonna be that kinda year.
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