“It all starts on Bunker HIll. Some people say we emerged from the 22nd Street tunnel to the stairs, ascending Angel’s Flight to the top of the hill, a bunch of us with Elote Girl with cornsilk in her long dusty hair and her sack of corn that she sells steaming with mayonnaise on the street corner. That’s not really true... not in the literal sense (what is?), that’s pure reductionism, but that’s what I’m going with because, because- anyway, yeah- we need a simple gesture at the beginning- especially for things that seem to have no beginning or end.”
Foster's collaborator here is Arturo Romo, an artist whose enfolding imagination is the perfect foil for Foster. From different generations they join forces here to convert the underlying wasteland that comprises industrial SoCal into a wonderland, splitting the difference between utopia, dystopia and apocalyptica. Their shared notion of a lighter-than-air movement, undetectable and insurrectionist, pits zeppelinist against dirgiblist, embedded in a narrative rooted in the grassroots of technological angst and political marginalisation. Lighter-than-air might also be a metaphor for Foster’s writing and Romo’s art work, not to mention their political perspective, which, to misquote Lenin, aspires to be as radical as reality (I was about to write sur-reality, but that would land me in the same soup as eurosplainer Dr Barnswallow in ELADATL’s opening chapter). They accomplish this by avoiding any Tinseltown ideology and representations, from which point they can work to undermine what amounts to the historical burden long facing various communities. As with Aztex, ELADATL is an act of recovery, an updraft of lost memories, as humorous as it is serious. Moreover, one can read the book as an homage to the absent and misrepresented, most predominant of which is the influential writer Oscar Zeta Acosta, around whose ghost dances a cast of strangers and malcontents, whether living or reincarnated, from Elmer Fudd to Lee Harvey Oswald. The result is an artifact that, despite the presence of various malignant forces, can’t help but offer more than a glimmer of hope. That is, if you can “attune your cellular vibrations to the frequency of Star Beings” and “the merciless winds of the human heart,” in which case you’ll be elevated in more ways than one.
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