About Dragón

The Genesis of Dragón

As Sentinel of a pre-Hispanic legacy, Tomás Chaneco has trained warriors to defeat the mysterious, eons-old creature, La Muerte Blanca.  But never has the chosen one been a too-young americano. To complete his duties, the shaman-storyteller Tomás must challenge and upset Miguel's entire worldview, with methods as powerful as Otherworld magic, and guide the young man in transforming himself into a fit Slayer.

Following the course of Miguel's angst over a mundane academic future and a family and society that value the material over the spiritual, he encounters Blasa, a bruja witch; Chicano bartender Julio; the secretive, Mexican dwarf Joker; and the uncomely Maya, pre-med student Maritza Magdalena, one of the creature's victim, whose life-mission is to destroy it. Allied with them, Jason finds first love, at a cost; his own nagaul spirit--the jaguar; curandera healers who nurture his health and heart; and lastly, his destiny in righting Earth's imbalance between ancient beliefs and modern technology.

The battle for Miguel's soul carries him from switchblade-fights in Chicano cantinas; to Taos art galas where the rich court the naïve and native; Hispanic ghost towns hiding intimate secrets; Otherworld magic on Sangre de Cristos cliffs and in Mexico City's urban jungles; battles deep in the sewers of the ancient capital Tenochtítlan where legends are buried in Náhuatl codices; and to the bottom of sacrificial, Maya cenote wells for the final fantastical battle. A self-aware Miguel emerges, his crisis of disillusionment resolved, composed in his own corrido ballad.

Reminiscent of Zorba and The Teachings of Don Juan, more than just "ethnic fiction" aimed at that audience, nor simply genre fantasy, Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub owes its birth to paths opened by Rudy Anaya and will give readers a whirlwind of a "dragon fantasy."

Listen to the opening chapter...

Read by Angel Mendez-Soto, Harlem native

  • Company member of Su Teatro Cultural and Performing Arts Center for over 40 years.

  • Member of the  Black theatre company Eulipions, 1980s

  • Ahora Teatro Hispano, 1990s

  • A Beckworth Spirit, 2017

  • The lead in The Source Theatre Company’s The Life & Times Of Old Alfred

  • Played Mr. Lujan in Northside, 2019

  • Played Captain Morales in Puerto Rican Nocturne.

Maritza's Escape in Tlatelolco

Read by Tonantzin Canestaro-Garcia

The Genesis of Dragón

"Carlos Castañeda meets kanji hunting in a rollicking adventure. Written in García's signature style, dense, humorous, and linguistically rich, this epic journey of discovery, transformation and destiny will keep readers at the edge of their seats and gasping at every new twist."

— David Bowles

Award-winning author of Feathered Serpent, Dark Heart of Sky: Myths of Mexico


"R. Ch. Garcia is a master of speculative fiction best known for his international award-winning book, Closet of Discarded Dreams. He may not have the same household name recognition as Stephen King or J.K. Rowling, but he should. His writing is powerfully evocative, lyrically descriptive, rollicking, rolling, smart yet down-to-earth, authentic and as unpretentious as anything of beauty on public display could possibly be. Yes, we are dealing with two shape-shifting, elusive dragons who have butchered their way through ancient New World civilizations, but in Garcia’s hands, this is the classic story of a seeker, a shaman’s acolyte who pits his humanity against the infernal supernatural, all told in language beyond what the Kings and Rowlings of the genre can do: poetic, double-entendred, witty, outrageously funny and ironic, soul-stirring, and interwoven with idioms, Aztec chants and Nahuatl healings spoken in the mists of ancient wisdom. The characters are unforgettable, diverse, with iconoclastic heroes and everyone else smashing stereotypes."

– Thelma T. Reyna

Author of Dearest Papa: A Memoir in Poems


"R. Ch. García’s novel is like a Mexican corrido, an epic ballad usually set to music, a hero’s personal journey as he faces dangers, tribulations, and monsters, human or savage. And so much more. Crisp lyrical prose throughout the story provides the musical background in this two-part fantastic novel: A young man’s quest for his bilingual bicultural heritage; a need to find the magic and meaning missing in his life lead him to enchanting Northern New Mexico first, then finally to old Mexico.  Miguel’s teachers are shamans--all men. But his guides through underground mazes, busy streets, and forests, traditions, the knowledge of life and death, the cultures, to understand with the heart first, then the mind—those teachers are women. This novel will remain on my reading table to enjoy again and again. Felicidades y aplausos, R. Ch. García. Encore!”

— Lucha Corpi

Author of the Gloria Damasco Mystery series


"A true Hero's Journey, intriguing, unique. I particularly liked the saturation of Mexican culture."

– Robin D. Owens

Award-winning paranormal author of the HeartMate, Luna and Mystic Circle series


"Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub will take you on a thrilling journey of discovery with protagonist Miguel Reilly, a teenager on summer break between high school and college. Miguel, in choosing to explore Mexican pre-Columbian anthropology, meets New Mexican shaman Tomás who sets the boy on an eccentric trajectory, his orbits spinning him closer and closer to an epic encounter with the ancient and legendary dragon, La Muerte Blanca, “Eater of Hearts,” in Tenochtitlán, the primeval heart of Mexico. Join Miguel and his allies in this mature, young-adult speculative-fiction novel, a life-and-death search that, if successful, will save the inhabitants of Planet Earth….at least for five hundred more years. A delightful story poetically written and charged with the life-force of youth. The fact is, I loved Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub!”

— Daniel Acosta

Author of the award-winning YA historical novel, Iron River


"Composed in a tantalizing style of Chicano sci-fi-mythology, Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub follows a young man's journey, reflecting on the meaning of his bicultural life in a country that erased all spirituality and people before the colonization in the 1600s. Miguel Reilly encompasses the realities of most pochos of all backgrounds trying to find their place in this nation while challenging the rites of passage in masculinity, the american dream, and ancestral healing. From a literary and contemporary point of view, Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub by R. Ch. Garcia intersects an echoing voice from the past with a new style of the present, provocatively transforming and retelling U.S. history."

— Sarah Rafael García

Author of SanTana's Fairy Tales & founder of LibroMobile


Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub displays R. Ch. Garcia’s capacity to weave a magical tapestry of Latino lore into something innovatively refreshing. He brings to life an exciting literary world where each page is an alluring incantation that can only be brought into existence by an esoteric mago of the highest order. A spellbinding novel – one you dare not miss! A BRILLIANT work.

— Boris Novak

Filmmaker/Screenwriter at DarkHatterFilms

An epic journey of discovery,

transformation and destiny will keep readers at the edge of their seats and gasping at every new twist.

-David Bowles, award-winning author of Feathered Serpent, Dark Heart of Sky: Myths of Mexico

A tantalizing style of Chicano sci-fi-mythology,

challenging the rites of passage in masculinity, the american dream, and ancestral healing. An echoing voice from the past with a new style of the present, provocatively transforming and retelling U.S. history.

- Sarah Rafael García, author of SanTana's Fairy Tales & founder of LibroMobile

Powerfully evocative, lyrically descriptive,

rollicking, rolling, smart yet down-to-earth, authentic and as unpretentious as anything of beauty could be. The characters are unforgettable, diverse, with iconoclastic heroes and everyone else smashing stereotypes.

- Thelma T. Reyna, author of Dearest Papa: A Memoir in Poems