Showing posts with label Latina authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Latina authors. Show all posts

Friday, January 01, 2016

Happy New Year! No Resolutions for Me.

Melinda Palacio




I sat down to write my New Year's resolutions but came up blank until I realized that my life is a work-in-progress, never finished. Perhaps, the masterpiece that is I will not be complete until someone, maybe my godson, puts the last rose on my coffin or virtual memorial stone. Not that I am a morbid person, just realizing that my time on this earth is finite. I plan on honoring this time by living in the joyous spirit of my mother, Blanca Estela. I was very depressed after her death, but at some point in the last decade, I chose to live. I'm grateful for family that I still have, especially my mother's mother who has a wicked sense of humor and makes me laugh every time we speak. Laughter has been a great healer throughout the years. And all my life apparently. My grandmother used to say that when I was a baby I was laughing in my crib with the angels. I still laugh in my sleep.

Most people's resolutions involve losing weight or getting in shape. Check. Last year, I fully recovered from my broken leg (and my year from hell, Adios 2014 and don't come back). Thanks to a new and improved spring in my step and ankle full of hardware, I am free to walk, run, jump, plank, and balance on one leg. The leg that broke, my right leg, continues to be my dominant leg. I am no longer crooked thanks to my wonderful yoga teachers. I still have a bit of a confidence issue that I continue to work on. When I approach a long flight of stairs, I take a breath before ascending or descending them. I am overly cautious about enjoying the outdoors and going hiking. I plan on overcoming my fear of falling next year, but this is something I've been working on since before I broke my leg. I've also taken a page from La Bloga's Gluten Free Chicano and tried out some gluten free recipes and have a adopted a low- carb diet so that I can have my cake and eat it too once in a while. So far, I've lost ten good pounds and counting. Adios extra stomach luggage. I'm glad I have a head start however since for me the process of shedding pounds is excruciating slow.

During most of my yoga meditations, there's usually a point in the class when the instructor reminds us to "let go of that which does not serve you." After two plus years of hearing Disney's Frozen, Let It Go, song, I've decided to let a facebook friend or two go. Since 2015 was the year of the fade away, I feel comfortable in unfriending people simply for being creepy or insincere in their friendship agenda. Adios creepy people. No explanations needed.

Last, but never least, is the most important business of writing. Yes, another work-in -progress. It's always satisfying to see books come to fruition. I plan on continuing work on two books and sure hope to finish them. Twice a month, I look forward to materializing a blog post for La Bloga. The time before a book belongs to the public is the sweetest. However, I am happy to announce that I see the three letter word approaching both manuscripts. And many of the poems for my bird book have been accepted and published by a variety of literary journals and websites, including the Academy of American Poets, The New Laurel Review, Rare Feathers: Poems on Birds & Art, Latina Authors andTheir Muses, The Mas Tequila Review #10, and three publications coming up in 2016, the new journal MockingHeart Review, the anthologies Coiled Serpent by Tia Chucha Press and Poetry of Resistance forthcoming from the University of Arizona.
 
Happy Day One of 2016! I'm looking forward to continuing my journey. Thank you for enjoying La Bloga, sharing our community, and supporting our literature. Join me in keeping bookstores and our culture alive through writing. Since I am in New Orleans for the New Year, later today I will eat black eyed peas, cabbage, and ham. My friend Crystal says the cabbage is for prosperity, the black eyed peas for good luck and the ham is to continue to look forward because a pig cannot turn its head to look back. Provecho and Cheers!


Friday, December 04, 2015

The Muse's Editor: Mayra Calvani

Melinda Palacio

Latina Authors and Their Muses
Edited by Mayra Calvani


I am honored to be included in Mayra Calvani's anthology, Latina Authors and Their Muses (Twilight Times Books 2015). In addition to reading about the distinct writing styles and inspirations from 40 different Latina authors, the book itself is a sort of muse that will bolster any aspiring writer. The book is also available in digital form for those who have crossed over to the non-paper side. I had the pleasure of interviewing Mayra Calvani. She also reveals who her personal muse is. Gracias, Mayra for this beautiful book. 

La Bloga: 
After reading Puerto Rican Voices in English, the 1997 anthology edited by Carmen Dolores Hernandez, you decided to do something similar for Latina Authors and Their Muses. What was it like creating interview questions for 40 different authors? And what would you like La Bloga readers to know about this book?

Mayra Calvani:

It was quite challenging because I wanted to ask questions that were important to me and that would be informative for some of my target readers (aspiring authors), so this meant some of the questions had to be generic (the usual questions about the creative process, landing an agent, finding a publisher, etc.), and others had to be somewhat repetitive because I wanted to get answers to the same questions from different perspectives. At the same time, the questions had to be interesting and original. I tried to combine all these elements into the questionnaires.

Latina Authors and Their Muses has been a project very dear to my heart ever since I came up with the idea back in 2008. The journey has been long and challenging, which is why I’m so thrilled to see the book published. It’s also been a wonderful journey of discovery and of sisterhood. I’m deeply honored to have worked with these accomplished authors. My goal is to spotlight their work and bring into attention the richness of their talent, but also to encourage aspiring authors and teach them a thing or two about the publishing industry.


LB:
What if anything would you do differently, now that book is finished? Did any answers surprise you?

MC: 
Now that I’m doing a master’s in Comparative Literature and have taken courses in literary criticism, I see how I could have included even better, more inquisitive, challenging questions. Apart from this, I don’t think I would have done anything differently. I feel that the journey evolved organically, that everything happened the way it should have. I actually wanted to include more authors, but the publisher told me we would have had to split the work into two volumes, so I decided to stop it at 40 interviews.

I was especially interested in the meaning of “success” for authors, and what it means to be a “professional author.” This is one of the questions I asked several times. It was enlightening to read the different responses. More than surprising, it was illuminating to get into the minds of these authors, what inspires them, what drives them, and what keeps them going in spite of the odds. In a way, they’ve all become my muses.

I was surprised by how different the journey has been for each author. For some, finding an agent and getting published by one of the big NY houses was fairly quick and easy. For others, it has taken many years.


LB:
For the cover of the book, you polled the authors and asked them to weigh in on the decision. I was pleased and nervous for you. Did bringing in all 40 authors make the process easier or more difficult for deciding on the final cover. Tell us a little more on the process. Who came up with the initial designs? Were you happy with the outcome or did you secretly hope for one of the other covers?

MC: 
The search for the perfect cover was an exciting journey! It took several artists and multiple covers (about 10, if I remember correctly) to come up with the “look” that the publisher and I were after. We wanted a look that would reflect the content and also appeal to target readers, but at the same time we didn’t want to be stereotypical. This was a big issue.

After several months we rounded up four covers designed by Tamian Wood. It was hard because all four of them were great in their own way, even though they all had different looks and evoked different feelings. That’s when I decided to conduct a poll with the authors. An overwhelming number chose the present cover as their preferred one—which also happened to be my and my publisher’s favorite. So everybody won.

Mayra Calvini
LB:
Why did you decide to focus on the author's muse. Do you have a muse? I'm guessing you do. Tell us about your muse and how your muse has influenced and inspired your volumes of books. 

MC: 
That sprang from the title. I came up with the title first, and that gave me the idea to begin each interview with a quote from the author about their muse. I thought it would be a nice attention grabber, something that would make the anthology stand apart from other similar titles.

I have a muse, but like Esmeralda Santiago’s, it is often elusive and mysterious. It has various faces and can shapeshift into many forms.  At times, she’s a nurturing angel who fills me with peace and confidence. Other times, she’s a belittling and cruel ice queen. Mostly, she’s the statue of the Egyptian cat goddess Bastet sitting on my desk and keeping a close eye on me. I like her the most because although she keeps me on a leash, she’s the perfect balance of gentle encouragement and firm discipline.

LB:
Is there anything else you'd like to tell La Bloga about this project or any future ones? What are you currently working on or what will your next book entail?

MC:
I recently terminated with an agent and I’m in search of another agent for a YA psychological thriller set in Puerto Rico in the 1970s. I’m also awaiting response from a publisher on a 4-book YA mythological fantasy series. At the same time, I’m self-publishing a series of novels under a pen name.

On the nonfiction front, I just got an offer for a contract for another anthology titled, Born to Write: Honoring Your Gift When Your Partner Doesn’t Support Your Writing. This will be a collection of essays from different authors.

So I guess I’ll have my hands full for a while. I’m excited about 2016 and can’t wait to find out what the New Year has in store for me.


LB:
Thank you for taking time out of your busy schedule, Mayra.

MC: 
Thank you for giving me this opportunity to talk about my book, Melinda!



About the editor:
Award-winning author Mayra Calvani has penned more than ten books for children and adults in genres ranging from picture books to nonfiction to paranormal fantasy novels. Shes had over 300 articles, short stories, interviews and reviews published in magazines such as The Writer, Writer's Journal and Bloomsbury Review, among others. A native of San Juan, Puerto Rico, she now resides in Brussels, Belgium.

Latina Authors and Their Muses includes interviews with 40 multi-talented authors:

Marta Acosta
Lisa Alvarado
Julia Amante
Margo Candela
Kathy Cano-Murillo
Mary Castillo
Jennifer Cervantes
Leila Cobo
Zoraida Córdova
Lucha Corpi
Sarah Cortez
Angie Cruz
Liz DeJesus
Anjanette Delgado
Carolina De Robertis
Lyn Di Iorio
Teresa Dovalpage
Carolina Garcia-Aguilera
Iris Gomez
Reyna Grande
Rose Guilbault
Graciela Limón
Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa
Diana López
Josefina López
Dora Machado
Maria Gabriela Madrid
Michele Martinez
Sandra Ramos O'Briant
Melinda Palacio
Caridad Piñeiro
Berta Platas
Toni Margarita Plummer
Thelma T. Reyna
Lupe Ruiz-Flores
Esmeralda Santiago
Eleanor Parker Sapia
Alisa Lynn Valdes
Diana Rodriguez Wallach
Gwendolyn Zepeda


Sunday, August 23, 2015

Bomba: How Lilliam Rivera Busted Into the Literary World

Olga García Echeverría

 
I met Lilliam Rivera in a magical place, at Ghost Ranch in The Land of Enchantment, beneath blue cielos pregnant with plush clouds, where the spirit of Georgia O'Keeffe floated softly in the hot humid air, her color palettes and desertscapes alive and breathing all around us.

Ghost Ranch in The Land of Enchantment
 
Lilliam and I were both fellows at AROHO's 2013 Writing Retreat and we were surrounded not only by rocky wonders, dusty caminos, and burros that bite, but also by bomb-ass women writers from around the country.


Burros That Bite at Ghost Ranch


That was two years ago, and since then Lilliam has been busy getting her writing thing on in Los Angeles and beyond. Lilliam Rivera is proof that bomba Latina writers "no nacen, se hacen." They roll up their mangas, write their hearts out, and work like hell to burst into a literary mundo that is still (unfortunately) predominately male and white. But gatekeepers aren't keeping this Puertorriqueña out.
 
Originally from the Bronx, New York, Lilliam is a 2015 Clarion graduate and a 2013 PEN Center USA Emerging Voices Fellow. Her work has appeared in Tin House, Los Angeles Times, Bellevue Literary Review, Tahoma Literary Review, Los Angeles Review of Books, Latina, among others. Her young adult novel, My Shelf Life, is represented by Eddie Schneider of JABberwocky Literary Agency. Once a month she hosts the Los Angeles-based radio show Literary Soundtrack on Radio Sombra. Most recently she won a Pushcart Prize for her story “Death Defiant Bomba or What To Wear When Your Boo Gets Cancer“ which was originally published in Bellevue Literary Review.



This past month, I had the opportunity to ask Lilliam about her creative work and how she's been dropping literary bombas here and there, making her writing dreams come true. Like a true trooper, Lilliam did this interview with me via email during her fifth week of a six-week writing workshop for science fiction and fantasy writers, Clarion. She was reading and critiquing about 17 stories each week and still made time for La Bloga, so mil gracias Lilliam! We are so happy to have you join us.  



Bomb Latina Writer: Lilliam Rivera
 


When did you first start writing and why?

I knew I wanted to be a writer all my life. After graduating from college, I won a scholarship internship to work at Rolling Stone magazine and have been writing professionally since 1996 with my first editorial job at Latina magazine. I started writing fiction about eight years ago.

Was there a particular inspiration for delving into fiction?

This may sound dumb but 2008 was a significant year. That dumb vampire film Twilight was released as was Junot Diaz’s novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. I knew in my heart that I could write a better vampire story with a Latina protagonist and when Oscar Wao came out, I felt I owed it to myself to actually try. I wrote a pretty silly vampire novel, which is now hiding somewhere in a closet, but that was the beginning.

You have been actively participating in the literary arts for some time and in a variety of ways, from journalism to radio to fiction writing (for adults and YA). How do all of these distinct genres feed into each other for you?

To me, everything that I write is an extension of the themes I want to explore. Whether it’s radio or twitter, I am celebrating and advocating for writers and people doing creative work, especially people of color. When I love something (a short story, a novel, a piece of art) I want to share it with everyone.

Do you find yourself writing about particular themes across genres?

I am exploring themes (family, immigration, addiction) that are universal but seen through the eyes of the Latino experience. For novels, I tend to gravitate to young adult because I know I can capture that voice. With short stories, I write more literary stories but honestly I hate all those boxes. Literary, young adult, or Latino science fiction. I love all of it. I’m never torn because there is always something new to write about. There’s no difference to me because it’s all a body work.

You were a 2013 PEN Center USA Emerging Voices Fellow and also previously the program coordinator of the Emerging Voices Fellowship. Can you share a little about your experiences as a fellow and as a coordinator of the program?

I heard about the Emerging Voices Fellowship from the author and writing instructor Al Watt. The literary fellowship lasts for eight-months and you are paired with a professional author who becomes your mentor. You also receive a UCLA writing class, Master writing class, voice workshop, and hosted evenings with authors, editors, and agents. It was intense but the work I put in, with the guidance of my mentor Cecil Castellucci, led me to compete my young adult novel and from that I found an agent.

I did work as a program coordinator for PEN Center USA close to two years and it was great being on the other side of the coin. Programming the Author Evenings was fun and I enjoyed helping new writers navigate the beginning of their writing journey. I also believe that whatever blessings you get, you have to give back.

You have a YA novel, My Shelf Life, that you completed and are currently working on publishing. Can you give us a synopsis?

It’s a contemporary young adult novel centered around Margo, a sheltered, self-involved Latina who is forced to work at her father’s failing supermarket in the South Bronx for the summer. The story is about family and addiction and the lies we all tell ourselves to fit in.

Can you share a little about the process of finding a literary agent and what it has meant for you?


When My Shelf Life was as ready as I could possibly get it, I started looking for agents. I hit up the authors I knew who had agents and asked their opinions and referrals. Surprisingly, I received an agent offer and in that same week, my short story “Death Defiant Bomba” was published in Bellevue Literary Review after receiving Honorable Mention in their yearly contest. Because of that, two agents reached out to me interested in representing me. This is after months of rejections and almost giving up on the novel. Who knows what is in store for My Shelf Life but it really is about continuing with the work.

Eddie Schneider of JaBberwocky Literary Agency is currently representing My Shelf Life. He’s sending the manuscript to publishing houses and I’m basically trying hard not to worry about it.

Finding a publisher, that's a whole other animal post the creation process, verdad?

It’s a waiting game and there are rejections The writing process is all about that. You create something, maybe spend years working on it, and then you want to share it with other people. You submit it and wait. Rejection. Submit it again. Rewrite. Submit it again. That’s what it feels like.

What else are you working on ahorita?

The goal this year is to finish a draft of my next young adult novel tentatively titled Dealing in Sueños. That novel is set in a secondary world where girl gangs rule the streets. Think Mad Max: Fury Road but with Latinas.

How do you maintain the ganas, momentum, and vision to keep your literary projects moving forward?


Ganas! I don’t know if I got that, I’m just crazy. I think I’m just determined to write. I’ve been saying this a lot in the past couple of weeks: I’m in it to win it. It’s probably just false bravado but I’m driven. I also surround myself with writers who feel the same way (Kima Jones, Jean Ho, Elizabeth Ross, Hilary Hattenbach…). They are navigating this journey with me.

Do you have a favorite time to write?

Will any free time do? I have a three year old and a ten year old so time is precious. But I live by the rule of dedicating two hours a day to writing, everyday. Those two hours can include writing something new or rewriting. It can be a short story or a novel. I don’t care. Sit down and write for two hours.

What are a couple of your writing essentials?

A light enough laptop that I can carry with me everywhere. I also carry a small notebook and pen with me at all times to jot down ideas.

Residencies and writing retreats? How important have these been to you in your writing career?

Well, for starters, I got to meet you at A Room of Her Own Retreat for Woman Writers!

That's true! We are AROHO sisters para siempre. That was a wonderful experience.

That was my first experience attending a retreat. I love being able to dedicate time and to be surrounded with different artists doing their thing. I’m always applying to grants and residencies. I received a substantial grant from the Elizabeth George Foundation. I also received a Leonard Pung Scholarship to attend Clarion. It’s important for a writer to toss your name out there because for the most part we are creating without seeing any money. As a mother of two, I don’t have the leisure of being able to afford a writing class. I have to figure out ways of supporting myself. It definitely takes time to fill out the extensive applications and essays but it’s worth it.

Radio Sombra is another creative project you are participating in. Can you tell us a little about your work on the radio?

Once a month I get to host a radio show called Literary Soundtrack on Radio Sombra. Radio Sombra is a community-run station based out of East Los Angeles in a galler/story space called Espacio 1839. One of the co-founders, Elisa Garcia is a fixture in the community. She ran Imix Bookstore for a long time and is a long advocate for literature. She asked me to join and I’ve been with them for a year. Literary Soundtrack features authors of color, their inspiration for their latest novel. Past guests have been Mat Johnson, Laila Lalami, Chris Abani, Willie Perdomo, and Ana Castillo, to name a few. It’s my chance to speak to writers that I respect and also champion debut authors that everyone should be talking about. You can tune in at RadioSombra.org/.

You just won a Pushcart Prize for you prose piece, “Death Defiant Bomba or What To Wear When Your Boo Gets Cancer.” Muchas felicidades! How are you feeling about this honor?

Thank you! I haven’t really had the time to process winning a Pushcart Prize because it just happened and I’ve been writing science fiction and magical realism short stories in this six-week workshop. I didn’t have time to let it sink in but It’s awesome.

I’m really happy that the piece was nominated. It’s another sign that I’m on the right path. But it also means I still got to sit down in front of that blank screen and write something new.

We are excited to be able to share an excerpt with our Bloga readers, but before we do, what inspired "Death Defiant Bomba"?

It’s a personal story told in second-person that tries to capture the many times I’ve had to go to the hospital to advocate for my husband (he’s had cancer and was born with a heart defect with two heart surgeries). It was painful to write and a little scary but usually that’s probably where you find the good stuff.

I wrote the story at the start of writing short stories and I needed a structure so I used bomba, which is a traditional song and dance performance from Puerto Rico. My brother Hector performs in Los Angeles with a group called Atabey and helped me understand it. The story was meant to be a submission for this contest in Bellevue Literary Review. (Contests are great ways to force you to follow a deadline.)
 
Lilliam, thank you so much for your time, your insights, and for the inspiration. Adelante, and we look forward to your upcoming novel!


Portrait of a Red Lamp as Prelude to a Red Excerpt


Excerpt from "Death Defiant Bomba or What to Wear When Your Boo Gets Cancer"
 
     If the doctor’s appointment is early, at 9 a.m., pull out the red sheath dress, the one that you bought on sale at Nordstrom with the famous but unpronounceable designer label. The red will wake the receptionist up like a motherfucker and cause her to send you hate for daring to outshine her that morning. The receptionist will think you’re tacky, loud, too much. In the bloodshot color, the doctor will notice that you wore the equivalent of a flag and think you’re stately and in charge. You’ll wear red, definitely red.
     If the doctor’s appointment is later, say at 3 p.m., then the only color you should wear is …red. Late in the afternoon the receptionist has not had time to eat the Snickers bar hidden in the drawer right next to some Orbit chewing gum, flavor piña colada, and the small box of “just-in-case” feminine napkins. The receptionist will be hungry and crabby from arguing with the old man with Alzheimer’s who keeps forgetting that his appointment is not today but was last week. She can’t curse at the old man but she’s on the verge. When she sees the red dress, she’ll think how presumptuous you are for wearing it like a drag queen, like a telenovela star, like a Nuestra Belleza Latina of the Month. But she’ll remember you and that’s all that matters.
     You’ll wear five-inch black pumps because they make that annoying noise that alerts everyone everywhere in the whole wide world that you’re arriving. What you really want to wear are your red high-top Nikes, the ones that makes you feel like you’re rolling back in the day with your crew of girls. You want to wear them with your baggy track jacket and a sports bra, tummy baring, all defiant. With your hair pulled up in a tight-ass ponytail and large gold hoop earrings dangling from your ears. This is what you wore when you first saw him, when he was playing handball, smacking that spaldeen like he owned it, like it was his bitch. Toma. If only you could reach for that outfit in your closet like an old friend, but no, you can’t go back. You will wear your red, expensive-looking sheath dress and black pumps. You’ll tuck in your nameplate necklace underneath the dress so that you can have some sort of protection.
     Your makeup will be subtle because you’re not going to El Coyote with your girlfriends to toast someone’s bullshit promotion, engagement, divorce, wedding. No, your makeup will be almost drab except for the lips. The lips are going to be making a lot of moves and there’s no question they have to be painted. At first, you’ll make the rookie mistake of going for lip gloss like some fourteen-year-old Lolita trying to lure some papi in the corner. No. That won’t do for today. Instead, you’ll grab the orange-red lipstick. So what if it clashes with your red dress. You don’t care. This is war. You’re going to double up on the red.
 
To read Lilliam Rivera's entire piece: http://blr.med.nyu.edu/content/archive/2014/spring/bomba
 
 

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Latina spec lit bio, Lit festival, writers workshops, y mas


Combining themes from Melinda Palacio's post on author writing and Ernesto Hogan's post Thursday on sci-fi/magical realism, today we feature a spec-lit bio by Kathleen Alcalá.

Kathleen Alcalá
Alcalá’s words “convincingly move the reader from one reality to the other. Her craft illuminates the souls of her characters: the Mexican women who carry the universe in their hearts," says author Rudolfo Anaya. Kathleen's work takes readers to “a world where one would like to stay forever” (Ursula K. LeGuin)."

Her following bio provides a non-macho perspective to both latino and speculative literature. This is great stuff--una escritora diversifying the no-female-heroines worlds of Lord of the Rings and the Star Treks.

Science Fiction and Me
by Kathleen Alcalá

1. When I was five, I knew how to read. Outside was a vast starry sky at night, and at times, a California condor by day. It looked like a small airplane. We did not know it was one of the last, come inland to cruise the thermals. The wind blew constantly through Cajon Pass, and earthquakes reminded us how small we were. It was not a prehistoric landscape, but it was mindful of its pre-history. One night, someone showed me a snowy owl in a palm tree, well out of its territory, and another night, I watched a mole with glistening fur dig itself out of the ground.

Inside, were things I could see without difficulty – crayons and paper, postcards from my aunt, and then my aunt herself, my older sisters who came home from school speaking English. I attended a two-room schoolhouse with all grades divided between them. When I was six, I discovered the Bookmobile and checked out a set of Dr. Seuss books. My picture was in the paper, a skinny brown girl with messy braids. “I feel like I’m five, but I’m six,” read the caption. My birthday had been a few days before. The Bookmobile to Devore Heights, California, was discontinued within months due to budget cuts, and because I was one of the few users.

contains an Alcalá story
2. Shortly after, my father lost his job, and we moved into the city of San Bernardino, where he became a substitute teacher until he was hired into a regular position. I attended Eliot Elementary School. It had an entire library full of books.  After the first year or two, we did not have a librarian, but I continued to read the books, working my way across the shelf of science fiction and fantasy books from Isaac Asimov to Roger Zelazny. Here were worlds within worlds, fully realized answers to “what if” questions, such as “what if we could fly? What if people lived on Mars? What if I could go back in time and visit another civilization?”

3. When I was in sixth grade, Star Trek debuted on television. My friends and I were ecstatic. The Man from U.N.C.L.E., a spy Cold War spy series, was also on. They could hide a microphone in a pen! We giddily waited for each weekly program. Before then, television had offered live variety shows featuring people our parents’ ages, then Laugh-In, that appealed to our older brothers and sisters. But Star Trek was aimed at us, the generation that grew up with astronauts and space travel. Star Trek was canceled after two years, but revived a couple of times after that, and lives on forever in reruns.

4. My oldest sister took her first teaching job in Arlington, California, part of Riverside County. She was not used to being by herself, so I went to live with her for one year when I was twelve. She taught sixth grade at a middle school, and I was in seventh at the same school. It was a better school than the one I had been attending, for which I was grateful. My sister was invited to meet an author along with some other teachers. When I heard it was Madeline L’Engle, I tagged along. I was the only person in the group of ten or so who had read A Wrinkle in Time. If I had owned a copy, I could have gotten it signed. It is still one of my favorite books.

5. I returned to San Bernardino, where my father now taught at Franklin Junior High School. In the summers, I took summer school classes at my own school, art and home economics (required), typing and library science. A brand new city library was built next to Franklin, but nobody used it. I sometimes went and spent the evening there while my father taught adult classes. I read three or four of The Chronicles of Narnia series by C.S. Lewis, as well as books about dragons by C. S. McCafferty. My mother worried that I was learning about witchcraft.

A boy at school, whose glasses were thicker than mine, claimed to have found the best fantasy books ever, The Lord of the Rings trilogy. I read one and proclaimed it, “good, but not the best” which led to heated arguments. What made a good fantasy book to thirteen year olds? Action and adventure, of course, but also depth of character, people we cared about. Where were the girls and women? Well-imagined worlds. I got him to read another book I had found, The Valley of Joy, and he admitted it was better. But it wasn’t as long, and so did not offer the same submersive experience.

6. In high school, we tried to stay alive. We had race riots, and the police would come and Mace us. I don’t remember if I read any sf or fantasy then. Does Kurt Vonnegut count? I got in trouble for reading a book called The Centaur, by John Updike. The woman who had played Lt. Uhuru on Star Trek, one of the very first African American women in a starring role on television, came to town for some reason and signed autographs. I got that one, and hope I still have it.

7. In college, I continued to read everything I could get my hands on. I was interested in language itself, so I studied linguistics and wrote for the school paper. A Clockwork Orange was released as a movie, and I refused to see it, because I had read the book and knew it was too violent for me. I can read most things, but movies affect me at a visceral level. I am less sensitive now than I was then. I found a copy of Cien Anos de Soledad and sent it to my parents, it was so much like the family stories with which I had grown up.

8. I went to work for KNBC in Los Angeles as a production assistant in the documentary unit. We were sometimes given free passes to movie openings. I saw Star Wars from the front row of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. It was the best sf movie I had ever seen, hands down. The experience was entirely wasted on my friend, who was unable to understand such a grand metaphor for the human condition. I had begun to write stories, but in a very realistic mode.

9. While living in Western Colorado, I spotted a small article in the Grand Junction Sentinel. There was a contest for the best science fiction story submitted to the Western Colorado Science Fiction and Fantasy Association. The prize for first place was a paid registration to a World Con that would be held in Denver later that year. ‘This one’s for me,’ I thought, and wrote “Midnight at the Lariat Lounge,” about people who come from another world to mine uranium. One of them falls in love with a human. It’s a pretty bad story, but it won first place. In order to accept the prize, I had to attend a picnic in Grand Junction. I drove around the park until I saw people in long costumes with face paint. “How did you know it was us?” someone asked. The food included blue, hard-boiled eggs pressed into square cube shapes.

10. I attended Denvercon while staying with my in-laws. A bit strange, and completely overwhelming for someone living in rural Colorado at the time. This was the first time I met a professional science fiction writer, or any living writer, for that matter, other than my aunt, who had self-published a book called I Married a Priest. I made friends with author Ed Bryant, who was later one of my instructors in Clarion West.

11. I moved to Seattle and applied to graduate school at the University of Washington. I said I was interested in science fiction. Joanna Russ taught there, and I would be able to study with her if I was accepted. I found and read one of her books. Russ, a famous feminist in the field of science fiction, was also the author of How to Suppress Women’s Writing, now in its umpteenth printing, which takes a humorous but devastating look at the excuses that have been used over the years to not publish certain work. As an afterthought, she added women of color.

11. Russ dropped a small pile of literary magazines in the middle of the table one day. “These will be the first places that publish you,” she announced to the class. I had never heard of small press publishing. I thought it was The New Yorker or nothing. I went through a directory and picked out the most obscure magazine I could find that took sf. I published my story, Midnight at the Lariat Lounge as a result. I continued publishing in small presses, including Black Ice and Calyx, a feminist press out of Oregon. People described my work as magical realism, while all I knew was that this was how stories were told in my family.

12. After receiving an M.A. in Creative Writing, I worked one year and bought my first computer with the proceeds. Daringly, I bought Microsoft Word software, new at the time. I should have bought stock.

13. I applied for and was accepted into the Clarion West Science Fiction Workshop, held in Seattle. The original Clarion was founded in 1968 at Clarion University of Pennsylvania (itself inspired by the Milford Writer's Workshop). Six weeks of writing boot camp, a different instructor each week, and one editor. All pros, all people worthy of emulation. My instructors included Ursula K. LeGuin, Samuel (Chip) Delany, Ed Bryant (as noted above) and editor Tappan King. My classmates included many sterling writers whose work you can read right now. I published Sweetheart in Isaac Asimov’s Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction about a year later.

This year’s class got to attend a reading by Neil Gaiman and attend a screening of Guillermo del Toro’s recent movie, Pacific Rim, with Gaiman. The workshop offers the Octavia E. Butler scholarship to writers of color. People make life-long connections by attending the workshop, but it is not for the faint of heart. In 2002, I served as an instructor.

12. Published my first book, Mrs. Vargas and the Dead Naturalist in 1992 with Calyx Books. The director and editor at the time, Margarita Donnelly, grew up in Venezuela and is perfectly bilingual. She was delighted to publish my stories, and worked hard to get it national exposure and reviews.

13. I published my first novel, Spirits of the Ordinary, with Chronicle Books. It was rejected by over twenty other publishers before Chronicle picked it up. Letter after letter went to my agent from editors who loved it, but marketing would not let them buy it for all the reasons listed in Rudy Garcia’s essays. It was not a coming of age story. It was not an immigrant’s story. It was aimed at a literary market. 

14. Ten days in the Sonoran Desert researching my second novel, The Flower in the Skull. By day, I used the libraries at the Amerind Foundation and the University of Arizona. By night, Hyakutake burned in the western sky, and coyotes (the four-footed kind) chased javelinas through the dark. The spirits of my ancestors were very much with me.

14. I published a third novel and a collection of essays. None of my work really qualifies as science fiction, but mainstream publishing does not make room for more than a couple of “ethnic” writers at a time. I have never made a living solely from my writing, but then, that is true of most writers. Science fiction helped make room for writing such as mine, another world within the world. I try to pay it forward by letting others know about these portals and windows.

15. I am writing a collection of stories that walk the edge of what editor Leslie What in the magazine Phantom Drift calls “The Genre That Dares Not Say Its Name,” What provides a dozen other names for “new fabulism”: “Slipstream . . . Magical Realism, Fabulist Fiction, Transrealism, New Weird . . . It is rooted in folk tale, religious belief, magic, surrealism, and superstition. Fabulist writing blends literary tropes with fantastic conceits, and in the process frees fiction from the limitations of realism.”

Am I a literary writer? All this, and more. - Kathleen Alcala

Kathleen is the author of a short story collection, three novels set in 19th Century Mexico and the Southwest, and a collection of essays based on family history. She received the Western States Book Award, the Governor’s Writers Award, and a Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Book Award, and two Artist Trust Fellowships.

She has a B.A. in Linguistics from Stanford University, an M.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Washington, and a Master of Fine Arts at the University of New Orleans. Her work is often referred to as magic realism, but Kathleen considers most of it historical fiction. She does, however, have a great affinity for the story-telling techniques of magic realism and science fiction, and has been both a student and instructor in the prestigious Clarion West Science Fiction Workshop.
Kathleen's blog, website and Twitter.


10 new latino writers for 2014

La Bloga amiga Sandra Ramos O'Briant is one of ten latin@s who received the following news: "You have been selected by LatinoStories.com among the 2014 Top Ten New Latino Authors to Watch (and Read).


Texas writing workshops open

At the Raul R. Salinas Classroom, Mexican American Cultural Center, Austin, TX

Next Saturday, November 30th, as part of the Flor de Nopal Literary Festival, a Solo Playmaking workshop will be led by Natalie Goodnow, a nationally recognized theatre-maker, teaching artist, and activist from Austin. "We’ll explore a variety of approaches to generating material for solo performance – monologue, storytelling, poetry, and movement."

The Bridge Building/Border Crossing: The Poet as Nepantlera workshop will be led by poet John Fry. "Poems enter us just as we enter them when we write. During the act of composition, we’re at once both builders of bridges and crossers of borders in a way that summons us body, mind, and soul. Following the writings of Gloria Anzaldúa, in this workshop we will explore how the act of writing poems allows for us to experience a state of being-in-between. She calls this state nepantla: a threshold state, or place, between supposed opposites like here and there, male and female, right and wrong, true and false, living and dead. Open to poets of all levels."

Events for Friday, December 6th
Flor De Nopal Literary Festival 2013 Reading featuring: Daniel Chacon, ire’ne lara silva, Natalie Goodnow, Lee Francis, Liza Wolff-Francis, Lisa Marie Estus, Mónica Teresa Ortiz, John Fry, and other writers TBA. Location: Multi-Purpose Room, Mexican American Cultural Center, Austin, TX.



A million petitioners to stop climate change

Yeb Sano
After Super Typhoon Haiyan ravaged the Philippines, Yeb Sano, Climate Commissioner for the Philippines, pleaded with the world to take immediate, drastic action to reduce climate change-causing carbon dioxide emissions in an emotional speech at the UN's climate meeting in Warsaw, Poland. He pledged to fast [hunger strike] for the two weeks of the conference. You can still add your name to the other three quarters of a million humans who already signed his petition.


Es todo, hoy,
RudyG