by Ernest Hogan

Highbrow/lowbrow probably ain't no big deal. Chicanos tend not to make that distinction. I can be surrealsitic and pulpy at the same time. It's a mestizo/rashquache thing.
As is LOM Book One. Lechuga calls it a Xicano science fictionnovel. And his roots go back to the original Chicano movement.

Besides the action, there are fascinating infodumps in the cyberpunk tradition – what strange, new traditions we have these days. It could capture the attention of the Grand Theft Auto video game generation who are protesting the police actions in their neighborhoods, and take them beyond gangsterims into a Xicano/Toltec/Hwrang Do future.
Or as Lechuga put in, in all caps: “THE SOCIOPOLITICAL SEEDS OF LOM'S DYSTOPIA HAVE ALREADY SPROUTED.”
And it is Book One. LOM is an acronym. What is stands for will be revealed in the final, fourth book.
Hang on, this wild ride has just begun.
Ernest Hoganwas born in East L.A., and is known as the father of Chicano science fiction because of his novels, Cortez on Jupiter, High Aztech and Smoking Mirror Blues and other stories.