Some intensely 90s adult paperback covers.
1: Industria (1984)
2: Funhouse (1993) and Bodega Sans (1990)
3: Crackhouse (1994) and FF Trixie LTR NCND (1991)
4: La Bamba (1992)
5: Halfwayhouse (1993)
seen from Singapore
seen from Canada

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from China
seen from France

seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from France
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Philippines
Some intensely 90s adult paperback covers.
1: Industria (1984)
2: Funhouse (1993) and Bodega Sans (1990)
3: Crackhouse (1994) and FF Trixie LTR NCND (1991)
4: La Bamba (1992)
5: Halfwayhouse (1993)
"No Statue of Liberty ever greeted our arrival in this country...we did not, in fact, come to the United States at all. The United States came to us." - Luis Valdez, Playwright and Director of Zoot Suit, the first Chicano play on Broadway in 1979.
Unfortunately it faced a lot of initial racial pushback from the snooty press and critics of the time as you can see from the early newspaper reviews, but the passage of time has validated the importance of the work in the American cultural heritage.
If you've never seen this play and subsequent movie, I highly recommend looking into it and the story behind it.
Luis Valdez later went on to achieve more success as the director of the seminal 80s musical film La Bamba.
Premiering in Los Angeles before moving to Broadway in 1979, the play became the first Chicano work to reach Broadway, dramatizing the 1942 Sleepy Lagoon case and the Zoot Suit Riots through a bold fusion of myth, music, bilingual dialogue, and Brechtian theatricality.
By centering Pachucho culture and reclaiming a narrative long distorted by mainstream media, Valdez reshaped the cultural conversation in New York’s theater scene and beyond. The subsequent film adaptation extended that impact nationally, marking one of the earliest major studio releases directed by a Chicano filmmaker and solidifying Zoot Suit as a landmark in American cultural history.
LA BAMBA (1987) dir. Luis Valdez
Lou Diamond Phillips in La Bamba (1987)
Pedro Pascal sings "La Bamba"
My LDP VHS collection so far. Do I have your favorite?
La Bamba
Happy Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month to my Asian and Pacific Islander followers! I'm reposting my art featuring characters from the upcoming Filipino animated series Sun Chaser, Jordan and his twin cousins La Bamba and Sessa 🔆