Aliens: Vasquez

Aliens: Vasquez

  • Downloads:7131
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-11-07 06:53:16
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:V. Castro
  • ISBN:1803361115
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

A groundbreaking Latinx Aliens novel by a rising star Latina author, featuring the fan-favorite character PFC Jenette Vasquez from the hit movie Aliens and the family she is forced to leave behind。

For the very first time, the canonical background of the breakout Aliens hero Jenette Vasquez, as well as the story of the children she was forced to leave behind as written by the rising Latina horror star V。 Castro (Queen of the Cicadas)。

Even before the doomed mission to Hadley’s Hope on LV-426, Jenette Vasquez had to fight to survive。 Born to an immigrant family with a long military tradition, she looked up to the stars, but life pulled her back down to Earth—first into a street gang, then prison。 The Colonial Marines proved to be Vasquez’s way out—a way that forced her to give up her twin children。 Raised by Jenette’s sister, those children, Leticia and Ramon, had to discover their own ways to survive。 Leticia by following her mother’s path into the military, Ramon into the corporate hierarchy of Weyland-Yutani。 Their paths would converge on an unnamed planet which some see as a potential utopia, while others would use it for highly secretive research。 Regardless of whatever humans might have planned for it, however, Xenomorphs will turn it into a living hell。

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Reviews

Scott Russell

https://www。somosenescrito。com/fictio。。。There’s more Aliens out there—the franchise has put out more video games, comics, and books—but it's the connected Predator franchise movie Prey that has people talking about Native women characters and representation in sci-fi lately。There's already been a famous bad ass brown woman in sci-fi—Jeanette Vasquez from the 80s movie Aliens。 Some might point out the actress who played her wasn't a Chicana and the writer wasn't either。 I recall some claiming sh https://www。somosenescrito。com/fictio。。。There’s more Aliens out there—the franchise has put out more video games, comics, and books—but it's the connected Predator franchise movie Prey that has people talking about Native women characters and representation in sci-fi lately。There's already been a famous bad ass brown woman in sci-fi—Jeanette Vasquez from the 80s movie Aliens。 Some might point out the actress who played her wasn't a Chicana and the writer wasn't either。 I recall some claiming she was a chola stereotype。 My rewatch of Aliens as an adult showed the character was capable, brave, and dealt with typical racism despite her not being written or depicted by a Mexican American。 Yet the character needed more。V。 Castro in Aliens: Vasquez gives Jeanette Vasquez a Chicana soul and a past and goes beyond a plastic sheen of culture。 The story pulled me in hard on the life Jeanette Vasquez and then her daughter Leticia living on Earth and as tough Chicana marines in space。 Not only does the character from the movie Aliens get a real deal Chicana soul in this book, the Aliens franchise gets a Chicano outlook。 The way Vasquez sees the world, how she lives, and how she fights xenomorphs is filtered by who she is。 She is a brown woman who is connected to a chain of warrior women, particularly the Soldaderas from the Mexican Revolution, whose coiled hairstyle was famously borrowed by Princess Leia。The Aliens franchise has thematically been about women fighting patriarchy, dealing with the monstrousness of reproduction, sexuality, parenthood and inheritance of roles。 As we all know Vasquez doesn't make it in Aliens, though tough to the end, and the book eventually hands her story off to her daughter, who also aspires to be an elite marine。 Her corporate ladder climbing twin brother and she eventually meet up again on a mission involving the heads of the Weyland-Yutani corporation on a planet little is known about。 The life of these two women, Jeanette and her daughter, is a struggle against the system, a patriarchy like many stories in Aliens, but compounded by poverty and racism。 Chicano culture comes through as they honor Santa Muerte in xenomorph constructions and make ofrendas and a native weapon, a macuahuitl out of xenomorph bodies。The author V。 Castro knows Aliens。 There are allusions to other Aliens media throughout the book, some characters are ancestors, some places get mentioned。 This is Jeanette and Leticia’s story, as much as Alien was Ripley’s story。 Jeanette and her daughter have more against them, they are working class Chicanas, but they are tough, they inspire and finally represent in the way Chicanos want。 Aliens: Vasquez isn't Aliens with taco sauce packets。 It's a Chicana story that everyone can appreciate。 This is more than representation, this novel is one of our stories, both in space and on Earth, in the future, something us brown sci-fi nerds always want。 Of course, I want more and want to see sequels of Aliens: Vasquez and more from V。 Castro。 。。。more