Folklore III, combines two narratives that relate Galicia, Spain, with Nueva Galicia, Mexico. The former is a region on the coast with a city called Finisterre (Land’s End), and the latter is a colonial territory which was renamed in its honor by the sixteenth century Spanish Queen Juana La Loca (Joanna the Mad.) Details entangle the viewer, including strange tiling and a Formica pattern that resembles an abstract computer rendering of the sea. The houses along the coast in “old” Galicia have been deeded a “right to fly,” meaning that they can expand in area as they grow in height, resulting in peculiar, inverted Aztec pyramids. The narrator becomes caught between new and old Galicia, an end and a beginning, a beginning which becomes an end, and the “right to fly” granted by a supposedly insane queen.