MY FIRST STORY COLLECTION! OVER 40 YEARS IN THE MAKING!

Sunday, September 19, 2010

CORTEZ ON JUPITER REFUSES TO DIE!

Since it was published twenty (gulp!) years ago , my first novel, Cortez on Jupiter, got good reviews, and established an underground cult following. And those good reviews are still coming in! The latest is from David Lee Summers, who won a copy in La Bloga's contest.

Guess I better get to work so I can learn all the stuff I need make it and High Aztech available as ebooks . . .

And get started with posting on "Chicanonautica" for La Bloga . . .

And news, reviews, and other weird stuff for Mondo Ernesto . . .

And, of course, more books, stories, and "art" . . .

Thursday, September 9, 2010

MESA OF LOST COPPERCON

I didn't get much rest this summer, then Labor Day hits like a missile attack, and more is happening than I can keep up with. This is going to be kinda gonzo, or like a twisted old sci-fi flick.


And we were off to exotic Mesa, Arizona to attend CopperCon in the Windemere Hotel, in a lost, underdeveloped sector of Mesa with lots of trailer parks, where they never quite figured out air-conditioning and had something against restaurants. Down the street was the Buckhorn Baths Motel, that offered Hot Mineral Baths and had a Wildlife Museum. Thank Tezcatlipoca for Jimbo's Good Time Grill, and their Voodoo Chicken Wrap.

Em and I were “Light-headed and a little out of touch with reality,” as the Firesign Theater so wisely put it. I made a cheat-sheet to keep track of all the things I was trying to promote. Em brought chemistry homework in her pink backpack. Co-incidentally, we both wore our Day of the Dead Taos T-shirts – telepathy?

I tried to mention Flurb #10, and “Doctora Xilbalba's Datura Enema” when ever possible. And the La Bloga Charla/Interview, Parts One and Two. With a bit of prompting, the audiences got responsive, they had things on their minds in these “interesting” times. Arizona Right-Wing/Libertarians seemed disturbed when I told them about online bullfight videos. The costumes were mostly Wild West steampunk, rather than attempts to worship any corporate franchises.

For a “What is SF?” panel, I meant to quote I meant to quote from Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas:

Naw!” he said. “That's science fiction stuff!”

Not where we operate,” said my attorney.

But I got distracted.

Rick Novy editor of the upcoming anthology 2020 Visions showed up with a copy of the cover art. It will include Em's story “If the Sun's at Twelve O'Clock, It Must be Yellow Daisies” and my own “Radiation is Groovy, Kill the Pigs.” He asked if I had a drawing of SeƱor Apocalypse, the villain . . . I hadn't, but got inspired.

Later, I tried not to trip over the life-sized R2D2s buzzing and beeping around the dealer room as I autographed and gave a copy of Cortez on Jupiter to David Lee Summers that he won in the La Bloga contest. He also gave me pre-order flyers for Space Horrors, that have the Em&Ern collaboration, “Plan 9 in Outer Space.”

Michelle M. Welch was there promoting her Theme and Variations (Opus2) where you can hear Em's “The Cat at the End of the World” and other podcasts (with music) of stories with musical themes.

DragonCon and WorldCon were happening the same weekend. I threw out the idea of linking them up through the Web. A World Wide Con? Why not?

Now I'm home. There's too much to do piling up all over the place. Gotta get back to the Aztec Western horror story I promised . . .

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

FLASH! ANOTHER ERNESTO STORY ONLINE! FREE!

"Doctora Xilbabla's Datura Enema" my latest story -- inspired by SB 1070 and other recent developments in my home state of Arizona is live & online, and you be can read it for free on -- in? whatthehell's the proper grammar for this newfangled situation? -- Rudy Rucker's ezine Flurb. Read it today -- live it tomorrow . . .

Saturday, August 28, 2010

SHAKY DISPATCH FROM AN APOCALYPTIC AUGUST

I haven't gotten much blogging done this month. That's because too much is happening. I'm overwhelmed while all kinds of apocalyptic events explode around me. I haven't had to deal with massive oil leaks, floods, or decapitations, but my dayjob at the Bookstore of Doom, the disintegration of publishing as we know it, and cars going dead in the Arizona heat, have disrupted my sleep-cycle and left me with little time to write and draw and all that nice stuff.

And the really bizarre thing is, the other half of my problem is that opportunities for writing are coming at me like piranha to fresh meat. Yeah, I know a lot of you wish you had those kind of problems, but what it comes down to is how many hours are there in a day, and how much energy I have to get it all done. After all I'm not a young and crazy as I used to be.

At least, I'm not as young as I used to be.

Still, I can't help it, I trudge on.

So keep checking in here, in between getting several short stories ready to appear in various venues, I'll be reporting about things fantastico and futuristrico, and/or Arizona for La Bloga (I'll link 'em directly into Mondo Ernesto), and continuing with usual explorations of whateverthehell weirdness catches my fancy.

Now, I guess I better get back to work . . .

Monday, August 16, 2010

PART TWO OF THE LA BLOGA INTERVIEW


Part Two Rudy Garcia's interview with me is online at La Bloga. In it I reveal the inside story about what the hell happened to my fabulous career, the influence of drugs on my work, how women react to my masculine heroes, and other things that I'll probably live to regret admitting, but -- why not? -- anything to amuse my fans!

Rudy also wants to know what people think of his interviewing style, so be sure to bombard him with comments.

La Bloga is also holding a contest, the winner of which will receive an autographed copy of my dangerous, mind-altering novel High Aztech. So enter early and often! And do not drive motored vehicles or operate heavy machinery under the influence of this book.

The last few week of this apocalyptic summer have had me distracted, but I will be back here at Mondo Ernesto with our regularly scheduled deprogramming, soon . . .

Saturday, August 7, 2010

ANOTHER ERNESTO INTERVIEW

Part One of an interview (or charla) with me in on La Bloga. It's got interesting background on my past, my novels, plus art and photos! And a chance to win a free autographed copy of High Aztech or Cortez on Jupiter. And it's only Part One . . .

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

ANOTHER ERNESTO STORY SALE!

My story "Radiation is Groovy, Kill the Pigs" has been accepted by Rick Novy for the upcoming anthology, 2020 Visions. Yes, the story is as wild and crazy as the title implies, and features Victor Theremin, radioactive marijuana, and mayhem along the U.S./Mexican border.

My wife, Emily will also have a story, "If the Sun's at Five O'Clock, It Must be Yellow Daisies" in 2020 Visions.

Future Mondo Ernesto postings will have updates and details.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

SAN FERMIN: BULLS AND BEYOND


While everybody else seemed to be tooting their vuvuzelas over the World Cup, I was enjoying La Fiesta De San Fermin. This is hard to explain in the Anglo culture of Norteamerica, with its strong Puritan and animalista tendencies. Most folks here see the blood, but not the spirituality. In America, people prefer their spirituality, like their meat, quietly killed in locked rooms far away -- drained of the blood, cut up, sealed in plastic, and frozen.


Bull running and bullfighting are taboo subjects here. Hemingway only scratches the surface in The Sun Also Rises, and apologizes all through Death in the Afternoon. I do not apologize for my interest in this fascinating human tradition, which is about more than bulls.


If a science fiction writer invented San Fermin it would be considered a masterpiece. No imagined “alien” culture is as rich and strange as this. It’s only reasonable that it should thrive on the Internet, where I follow it. Someday there will be a satellite TV channel with 24-hour coverage.


Meanwhile there’s always Sanfermin.com.


This year the bulls kicked ass. Before the fiesta started in Pamplona -- even before PETA’s psuedo-naked protest-that-has-become an opening ceremony -- a young man was gored to death in a bull run in the small town of Fuentesauco in Northern Spain. Yes, they run with bulls in other places. There were no deaths during the fiesta, but plenty of injuries. Like the protests, these are well covered online.


A record was made for the fastest encierro (run) in history. It wasn’t as interesting as the “chaotic” one the next day, when a bull broke away and caused mayhem in the streets like a scene from a monster movie before entering the ring. This is why a non-sports fan like me loves this stuff: Aesthetics are more important than statistics.


But then, this isn’t sport. It’s ritual.




Skyyjohn has not only done his best to break the race barrier, but has called attention to the fact that women are running with the bulls. I hadn’t noticed until I saw his video, then checked others -- and say that yes, not only are gals wearing the white clothes and red scarf, but they're running. One girl got her tank top ripped away by a horn.


There were also men dressed as women. It must take a special kind of courage to run with bulls in drag. And there was a homoerotic theme to their frolicking.


And Mister Testis, the big, blue cartoon bull with the big, blue balls, is there to entertain the kiddies. It’s like Disneyland with tits, ass, blood, guts, and cojones.


It’s human tradition. As Richard Wright said in Pagan Spain: “Somehow the pagan streams of influence flowing from the Goths, the Greeks, the Jews, the Romans, the Iberians, the Moors lingered strongly on, and vitally on, flourishing under the draperies of the twentieth century.”


I’m delighted to see them flourishing in the Twenty-First Century.


Thursday, July 15, 2010

WESTERCON: BETWEEN MARS AND PASADENA

The day before WesterCon we took a tour of Jet Propulsion Laboratory. It’s Space City, California -- with lots of huge liquid nitrogen tanks and its own police force -- a NASA installation founded by rocketeers that’s becoming more like Disneyland as time goes on. Could a space theme park sponsor its own interplanetary explorations? The clean room where they were building the next Mars Rover with its Chuck Jones/Wile E. Coyote landing system and mission control were part of both history and the future.


After that, I felt ready for a science fiction convention.


The lobby was a Free Wi-Fi pit. There I talked to guest of honor Rudy Rucker. He put the idea in my head of writing a story about SB 1070 in Arizona. It took root and started growing . . .


The Martian jungle-ish Desert Garden of the Huntington Museum was a science fiction experience. “This is like being on Mars!” blurted a young man. Later we went back with Rudy and his wife Sylvia. This time Em brought her camera. Rudy took some pictures of us.


Old Pasadena -- pre-Deco architecture peeks through post-modern pretensions with the occasional boarded-up business reminding us of the decaying economy. The architectural time warp of Colorado Boulevard has plenty of cafƩ/bakeries. We found Indian and Mexican food far better than the overpriced snacks at the hotel.


There were not many books in the dealer room, though I did buy some Michael Moorcock and Norman Spinrad paperbacks out of nostalgia for the good old New Wave. I did a lot of reading at this con -- Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (La Fiestia de San Fermin began the day after), and David Hatcher Childress’ Yetis, Sasquatch & Hairy Giants (there are still mysteries to search for).


Later in a nearby antique mall, I bought Ray Bradbury’s essay collection Bradbury Speaks (some of that old excitement), and Roger Corman’s How I Made a Hundred Movies in Hollywood and Never Lost a Dime (inspiration on how to do my evolving business).


People from India were partying in their colorful ethnic clothes, and dresses from a quinceaƱra dance dazzled. The fans in steampunk costumes seemed drab by comparison.


A 19-year-old man was killed in a pre-San Fermin bull run in Zamora, Spain. PETA’s opening ceremony this year was to have the now traditional pseudo-naked protesters lie down in the shape of a giant, bleeding bull. Science fiction needs something like that -- rituals to awaken our inner wildness, that we need while exploring the universe


Rudy’s talks were well attended by enthusiastic crowds. He spoke of quantum loops. Later, in a cafĆ© on Colorado Boulevard, I saw a Latino write, “I can make a quantum loop,” on his laptop. Science and fiction are intruding on reality -- as it should.


Beyond San Bernandino, still under the smog, in the desert, datura blooms alongside I-10, like something out of the story that was growing in my brain . . . science fiction intruding . . . maybe there’s hope . . .


Friday, July 9, 2010

TOURISTING THROUGH MY NATIVE SOCAL

West of Phoenix, there were lots of shredded tires beside the I-10. Did I see condors hovering overhead? or just big-ass vultures? Why were they watching the closed rest areas and abandoned gas stations?


At the first rest area in California there were flies all over the men’s room walls. A Tejano kid smiled big while getting his picture taken by the CAUTION: RATTLESNAKES sign. Welcome to California, may your reptilian dreams come true.


Soon we were cruising down the Sonny Bono Memorial Freeway, and back under the smog where I was born.


West Covina, my hometown, has become comfortably alien. The cramped courtyard of our hotel, with its swimming pool and palm trees peeking over the building, could be used to shoot a scene for a spy movie set in Latin America. West Covina is simultaneously morphing into a franchise megasprawl and a Neo-Latin America.


Later, as we headed for the La Brea Tar Pits, I saw a sign to the Byzantine-Latino Quarter. The Tar Pits Page Museum was a wonderland of Ice Age skeletons. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art offered PreColumbian ball game artifacts, and human skulls -- Aztec and Asian Pacific -- with beautiful decorations. My imagination erupted all over the place as we ate in the Farmer’s Market.


Is it me, or has L.A. -- this place that people from West Covina talk about as a foreign country -- gotten relaxed? The Yuppie Era is over, along with anglo domination. And it’s still the world’s most luxurious disaster area.




My parents took me to the opening of Disneyland while I was still in the womb, and I can’t get away from it. Besides, I need to pay homage to the Animation Gods. I was glad to see that the guy selling shrunken heads in the Jungle Cruise is still there. Waiting in the many lines was a woman in a Goth Virgin of Guadalupe T-shirt -- the halo was a cobweb. Other gals dressed to show off their ample cleavage. An old man didn’t bother to cover the tattoo of a bare-breasted beauty on his arm. Do special demons lurk in the smoking areas of the Magic Kingdom?


Disneyland is a masterpiece of crowd control. And civilization begins and ends with crowd control. But the real fun starts when you break free of both the crowds and the control.


Under the starless, reddish-grey SoCal night sky, I dreamed that I was coughing up tiny bats, lots of them. I wasn’t disturbed. The LACMA had reminded me that bats in Asian and PreColumbian cultures are considered to be symbols of good fortune.