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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Mexico", sorted by average review score:

Riviera Maya Guide & Map
Published in Map by Can-Do Cancun (01 January, 2000)
Authors: Treaty Oak and Laura McFarlin
Average review score:

Super Fantastic Travel Book in the Form of a Map!!Kewl
I have been to the Cancun~Tulum Corridor now refered to as Riviera Maya on 5 different occasions since 1995 and find this Travel Book Map to show me places that I have driven by for the last 4 years. I would say that the detail of Hotels, Restaurants, Condominiums, Bungalows, Cabanas, Grocery Stores, Tourist Playgrounds, Mayan Ruins and other facts are just not available in any other source. I would not leave for the Riviera Maya without it! I would recommend this Travel Book Map to anyone without hesitation. The cost of the Map will be returned to the user over and over again on just one trip to the Riviera Maya. Thanks to Laura and Perry McFarlin. Bill in Tulsa.

Everything you need in one map
I ordered the Riviera Maya guide/map for our first trip in July. It answered all our questions we had as to where certain destanations were from where we are staying and so forth. It showed how far south of Cancun we will be staying. All kinds of restaurants to try and shops to visit. I was certainly interested in the ruins but always heard it was quite a trip from Cancun. We will be staying in Playa Del Carmen and that seemed a little more centrally located on the map.This will be the first thing I pack for the trip! Thanks to Laura and Perry for such a great map.

First-rate and concise information in an easy to tote form
The Maya Riviera map by Laura McFarlin is a marvel of information design! It's clear and concise illustrations pin-point almost every building and attraction along this coast and is informed by the use of geo-positioning technology. And, unlike many other travel guide books, it is very compact and easily packs along with you in a pocket or your purse. It is also the most up-to-date source of information for the area available today! The author and her husband travel frequently through-out the year to the Maya Riviera to revise and update the superb guide.


What Night Forgets
Published in Hardcover by Herodias (15 June, 2000)
Author: Don Yorty
Average review score:

What Night Forgets
I have just finished reading Yorty's first novel for the third time. I can't stop comparing him to my other favorite novelists: Conroy, Kingsolver, Uris and Steinbeck. He paints beautiful images with poetic prose that transport me to locations I've never been. Don Yorty's new book is on my list of the 10 best I've read in the last decade (and I read a lot!) I anxiously await his next novel. Buy this book!

Poet's 1st Novel of Erotic Intrique in Mexico a Masterpiece
What Night Forgets By Don Yorty Herodias

American writer-artist-poet, world traveler, and Manhattan community activist Don Yorty's first novel, the politically explosive, erotically charged What Night Forgets (Herodias)-set in Mexico against a compelling backdrop of international governmental intrigue, zanily complicated exotic travelers, stunning regional flamboyance, and apocalyptic redemption-is a literary masterpiece. There's a picture-postcard perfection that lies on the surface which he peels away to reveal what simmering violence lurks beneath to erupt into sudden, stark chaos; and then the luminous possibility of renewal. Imagine Night of the Iguana mated with Under the Volcano, and a brief side-trip to "Bring me the Head of Alfredo Garcia" country. Lavishly descriptive, Yorty gives us the unseen hand of the CIA wreaking its global destabilization; shimmering with lust, madness, bad politics, destructive marriages, an ambiance of dreamily realized eros, the timeless wonder of grasshoppers with lime, and the sheer redemption of harvesting alfalfa with a machete.

-Maralyn Lois Polak

What Night Forgets
I found Don Yorty's first novel very compelling--his use of the Spanish language throughout the book was especially interesting. I started reading it on the plane from New York City and finished it by candlelight after I got home--perhaps it was the thunderstorm which caused the power outage--I prefer to think it was the electrifying images in this book!


Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatan
Published in Paperback by Dover Pubns (November, 1969)
Author: John Lloyd Stephens
Average review score:

timless classic
This is a Must read for anyone with even a passing interest in the mayan culture. Still easy to read even though it was written over 150 years ago! Imagine you are one of the first explores to adventure into the the jungles of the Yucatan and vist the ancient cities hidden in the jungle. I wish I had read this book before My trip to the Yucatan, would have made my trip that much more enjoyable! The Catherwood engravings are spectacular!

ADVENTURE TRAVEL WRIGHTING AT ITS BEST!
This is a must read for any one with an interest in the ancient Mayan culture an ruin sites. the other reviewers have summed this book up great, but I just wanted to throw in my two cents.

Unabridged John Lloyd Stephens
And real full strength Catherwood illustrations.

Unlike some of the recent re-edited editions of Stevens' and Catherwood's work, this Dover Publications edition Volume One of the two volume "Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatan presents dense, complex, and revealing insights into a brilliant writer's impressions of travel in nascent Central American countries.

Regarding his charge to enter into diplomatic relations with the governments of these countries, Stephens reports, "I was not able to find one..."

In following Stephens eccentric and sometimes high-handed travels through these unsettled societies, we are by contrast in his ruminations given glimpses of the political and social climate in the United States at that time - a commercially predatory, exuberantly expansionist, segregated society. Despite the biases of his times, Stephens is always adaptable to the ways of his hosts.

Although not great in number, Catherwood's illustrations of the stelae at Copan are truly great. His revealing comments on the difficulty of adapting his Western perception enough to capture the scenes even with the help of his camera lucida - tell us just how unusual the sculptural forms were.

As a team - Stephen's enthusiasm and wry humor and Catherwood's sublime skill and dogged persistence - consistently produced great and discerning works of scientific and historical value.

It should be illegal for anyone to edit or abridge these books.


Arroyo: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Chronicle Books (June, 2001)
Author: Summer Wood
Average review score:

Great first novel
This book was a pleasure to read. The prose is right on, the characters are people you'd like to hang out with, and the evocation of the small, dusty towns of northern New Mexico puts you right there.

Arroyo
Summer Wood's book, Arroyo, tells a sublimely beautiful tale. The insight Ms. Wood has into humanity is profound; her characters are believable; attention to detail is exraordinary; and the humor that pervades this story is magical. As I read Arroyo, I felt as though my heart was being filled with love.

In my opinion, one of the most important jobs an author has is to bring a satisfactory conclusion to all of the story lines that take place in their book, and Ms. Wood wraps things up perfectly. Upon finishing this story, my eyes filled with tears, and for thirty minutes all I was capable of doing was sit in my chair reflecting on the beauty of what I had just read. It was two weeks before I could even think of reading another book because I wanted to hold onto the feeling Arroyo left me with.

Do yourself a favor and treat yourself to this book. You will be hard pressed to find a more uplifting experience, and it is likely that you will walk away from Summer Wood's Arroyo with a new found joy in your heart.

"Arroyo"
I loved this book. The characters are so well drawn that they truly came alive for me. The story is both tender and tough, quiet and explosive. I was sorry when I came to the end. This book will live in my heart for a long, long time.


Mexicolor: The Spirit of Mexican Design
Published in Paperback by Chronicle Books (November, 1998)
Authors: Melba Levick, Tony Cohan, and Masako Takahashi
Average review score:

A lot of ideas for my new home
I was (and still am) searching for books, information and pictures of mexican architecture and color. This book was helpful for me, and also brought back great memories of my two trips to Mexico. This country is amazingly beautiful and rich in cultural heritage, and in my search for rustic/mexican ideas that I can adapt to the design of my new hacienda-type home, I found that the book satisfied me with all the beautiful pictures portraing the real Mexico. A must have for mexican citizens living outside the country, and Mexico freaks (like me) as well.

Mexico lindo/Beautiful Mexico
Having travelled through most of the states of Mexico, witnessing the enchanting colorful culture firsthand I can say this book captures the essence and beauty of Mexico lindo. It reminds the viewer of the places and people of Mexico in all their colorful splendor. What traveler through Mexico can forget the mercado (outdoor maketplace)experiece with the aromas and color blending for an intoxicating mixture that stays with you for a lifetime? It is all captured here in this brilliantly colored book. An inspirational book for the artist as well, the splashes of color jump from the pages into one's imagination for new ideas based on centuries old traditions. Although the fantastic color photographs are the highlight of this magnificnet book, the text is equally as good and highly informative. Little known tidbits abound. Take for example the centuies old technique of hanging cactus upside down to attract cochineal bugs. The bugs are then crushed to extract a wonderful red dye for wool rugs. Nothing is wasted, the bugs are sun dried or toasted on a griddle and mixed with lime after being crushed to a powder. The 21 chapters cover all aspects of Mexican life and each deserves the utmost attention since the detail given to each is exquisite. Nearly half of the chapters are dedicated to some aspect of the home, whether the garden, renovated haciendas or charming homes away from home for the traveler, the peeks into the places of rest are magnificent. The section featuring four artists homes is fabulous. There is one particular chapter that I love most, it is simply entitled wood. Here one will find marvelous wood creations, including masks and furniture as well as the famous wood carvers from Oaxaca, who create whimsical, colorful animals that defy conventional conceptions. There are other places to find wood creations as they are featured throughout the book in one form or another. This book demands to viewed over and over. This is one not to be shelved but to be kept handy for reference or inspiration. I would highly recommened this book to anyone who loves the old world culture that is Mexico. It is one of my favorite books that I cherish, a special gift that I view often, colorful memories rekindled and brought to life again and again.

My decoration/collection bible
I ADORE this book!!!! I have poured over it SO MUCH that the spine is cracked open on certain pages. Masako's love for Mexico, the people, the artesania, the "flavor" of Mexican life (well detailed in her husband's book "On Mexican Time") comes screaming through loud and clear on every page. I am an AVID collector/aficionado of all Mexican folk art, handicrafts and artesanias, and this book is virtually my decorating bible. Well worth every cent I spent on it and so much more!

The only flaws (for me)are the chapters on Modern Mexican Architecture and the artists' homes- WAY too modern, as far as I'm concerned, and they do NOT blend with the rest of the book!!!!! However, I have LONG ceased to let those chapter ruin my enjoyment of this simply INCREDIBLE book- I simply skip over them, refuse to look at them, and revel in everything else in the book. My only REAL regret is that she doesn't hurry and come out with MORE books, MORE often!!!!!


The CODE OF KINGS: The Language of Seven Sacred Maya Temples and Tombs
Published in Paperback by Scribner (June, 1999)
Author: Linda Schele
Average review score:

A great achivement in art/history commentary
"The Code of Kings" suffers from too much seriousness. The structure of the book relies on interpreting some main architectural achievements of the Mayan kings who commissioned them. That is, for most chapters a brief historical narrative is followed by a detailed description of the monumental group of interest and ends with an interpretation as to its relevance. The interpretations are good, and we can appreciate the great scholarly gifts of Linda Schele (in particular when the authors dispose of the Toltec Maya myths of Chichen Itza). We can even be moved at times such as when the authors talk of the Great Plaza of Waxaklahun-Ubah-K'Awil (this reviewer was happy to have read it a few days before going to Copan). However, this dense package might scare away a more casual reader of the Maya history. It also makes this book pretty useless to take along in your trip to Guatemala and Yucatan, unless you will have plenty of time to sit down under some trees and read while you visit. But if you have plenty of time to prepare for your trip, you definitely need to read it. And of course, it is a must in any serious book collection on the Maya.

The Code of Kings
This is not just an archeological study of some of the most important sites of the Maya world, it is an inmersion into Maya philosophy and art. I found it exciting how the book relates stories about the conflicts and conquests between the city states and their kings. Some of the new theories into the Toltec migration to Maya land are also very interesting and refreshing to read. I don't think this is a beginner book, at times it digs deep into Maya symbology and thinking, this could make it hard to follow if you're not familiar with some Maya history. Overall, like all of Schele's work, this is an excellent book.

A very nice and unexpected surprise
As soon as I started reading "The Code Of The Kings" I knew that one thing was wrong with the book ...the title!. The title had make believe the book had something to do with glyphs in detail, Maya writing system description, the deciphering of such a system, etc. Instead I faced with ... Linda Schele's "A Forrest Of Kings", Part Two!. I loved "The Code Of The Kings" ... even when it wasn't what I had expected!


Conquest of New Spain
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (August, 1963)
Authors: Bernal Diaz, Bernal Diaz Del Castillo, and J. M. Cohen
Average review score:

Amazing History, Bland Style
Incredible story of how a relatively disorganised bunch of gold hungry Spaniards on the edge of the empire and with nothing to lose managed to successfully invade a country with great wealth, an established dynasty, and vastly greater military strength. Poorly written, in as much as Diaz blandly reports some amazing events and characters, but the content is enough to get you through (even if it takes a few sittings).

Also raises the perplexing issue of how far they were actually doing work that extended God's kingdom, despite their greed. They threw down idols and brought knowledge of Christ. They did some other things too...

The Best to Date on the Subject
The Conquest of New Spain, by Bernal Diaz is perhaps the best telling of the events that followed the untimely arrival of Hernan Cortez and his band of Conquistadors in Mexico. Diaz himself was one of those conquistadors, and although his takes on what happened are not without bias, they are nevertheless very informative. When you finish reading this book you will have a near perfect understanding of what happened to the Aztec Empire in Mexico.
This book gets the highest recommendation possible.

Blood and Gold
I bought this book while on vacation in Oaxaca. A friend of mine had told me to read it before I went there, and I now know why.

In Oaxaca, I was struck by the beautiful old churches, some dating from the 1500s, that seem to be every other block. As a Catholic, I am used to blood with my Jesus and my saints, but these churches were overwhelmed by it. Along with the red paint though, was the gilt, representing the riches that lured the Conquistadores to the New World.

Diaz's account is thorough, and detached, given the gore, the wars, and the grand and terrible horrors and majesties that he encountered as a captain for Cortes. This quest for gold becomes a war between Christian soldiers and (sometimes) peaceful cannibals, between noble savages and savage nobles, between the old world and this old new world, between ways of living very differently lived.

Diaz is not a historian. He is an excellent reporter. His report is incredible, and true, which makes it even more incredible.

His eyewitness accounts of the temples stacked with torsos, red to the ceilings with blood - the grandeur of Mexico City - listening to captured friends being sacrificed to the gods - Cortes' cynical manipulation of tribal conflicts - to me explain much about the "modern" Mexico.


Pilot Down, Presumed Dead
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Author: Marjorie Phleger
Average review score:

Pilot Down, Presumed Dead (Review)
The book is kind of boring in the beginning, but hey most books are. After a while you can really get in to it. I loved it! Kenny read it and he couldn't stop saying how good it was when I was trying to read it and ignore him. But he was right! I gave it 4 stars because the beginning was kind of a drag, but the rest was great!!! THANKS!!!!

Stunning Work
A story about a stranded man attracts even the laziest of readers. Pilot Down, Presumed Dead is a one in a million novel, it is simply stunning, it gives the reader a detailed vivid image of the action; honestly, this novel placed me inside the action. My hands couldn't get off this great novel....very well portrayed.

The Great Book
I read this book and thought it would be bad but when I stated reading it turned out great! It is about this guy that crashed on an island and was stuck there for three and a half week and he needed to get off. The bad part is when he has to leave this coyote that was friend with for three weeks.


The Labyrinth of Solitude
Published in Paperback by Grove Press (June, 1985)
Author: Octavio Paz
Average review score:

Mexico Finally
I wonderful book that examines the political and human level of Mexico and its deep rooted history. Most people think of chaos in reference to this great country, I suggest you read this beautiful book to understand the complex structure of Mexico.

Los Mexicanos Defined
I first read this book in the early 70's and enjoyed it immensely. Being od Mexican descent it gave me insight into who I am and why. I have read this book again recently, upon Paz's death, and found it still as enlightening. The style of writng is beautiful, poetic , and full of symbolism and metaphors. While working in education I highly recommended it to my collegues to better understand the Mexican psyche. Anyone who works in the public sector or deals with Mexicans on either side of the border should read this book. It will help you understand the mind of the Mexican and how it works. One of my all time favorite books that should be enjoyed by all people interested in human behavior.

PAZ PERFECTLY DESCRIBES WHO MEXICANS ARE AND WHY THEY ARE
No other book has been able to accurately describe the Mexican psyche as Paz has done in this book. His eloquent prose style captivates the Mexican spirit in all its grace and in all its sadness. He brings all of Mexico's conflicts and taboos together and strips off all its masks to reveal the Mexican. I found his style to be poetic, eloquent, and majestic. Never had I read a book as powerfull and truthfull as Paz's. It is no wonder Paz was honored to receive the Nobel prize for this work. Any individual willing to read this book will finish it understanding Mexican culture and history better.


The Death of Artemio Cruz
Published in Hardcover by Farrar Straus & Giroux (May, 1991)
Authors: Carlos Fuentes and Alfred Mac Adam
Average review score:

The long winding road
In what is agruably one of Carlos Fuentes's best books(not my particular fave) he creates a story that is put together in such a fashion that it demands the readers full attention . At times it is difficult to follow the time period jumping by the narrator, Artemio , as he reflects on his long life and the twists and turns the events of his times have had on his own life. The narration allows Fuentes to give his jaded view of a corrupt Mexico and the power that it yields individuals. The author is never one to sugar coat his own personal views on Mexico, its culture, traditions and ultimately history. Fuentes focuses in and out of different time periods, at times in rapid freeze frames, like a camera run amok capturing the highlights of a journey, Artemio Cruz is forced to examine his own mortality and the terms of his own integrity. The book is a brillinat piece of literature that deserves more than one read. Like the character in the book , whose life has changed through the years, I decided to read this again and see if it was as powerful as the first time I read it some twenty years ago. For me the book is even better now, the translation is excellent and the book resonates with brilliant imagery and the importance of time and it's overall effect. I would recommend this book to anyone who is interested in the literature of Mexico and would be an excellent choice for secondary educators teaching a course at the advanced literature level. This is a book that can be examined closely for it's allegorical substance as well as literally for it's historical commentary.

The moment of truth
Artemio Cruz was a destitute boy when the Revolution started. Being a brave and unscrupulous man, he made his way through war and found an important place in the Regime that followed. He became rich and powerful through blackmail, bribe, collusion and violent corruption in general. Now, he's lying on his deathbed, remembering his life. In this novel, the most important character is language itself. Fuentes goes back and forth in time, using First, Second and Third person narrative, to reflect the different standpoints from where the story can be seen. The most interesting thing about the novel is the exploration, from the outside and the inside, of Cruz's mind and personality. It is also an allegory of Mexican history of the past century, which can be used additionally as a metaphor of human history in general. So, why the four stars, instead of five? I think Fuentes's portrait of Mexico, while certainly accurate, uses too many cliches and commonplaces. It's a personal thing, not to dishearten potential readers: the novel is good and cleverly constructed.

Just shoot me in the head already (but not literally...)!
In Death of Artemio Cruz Fuentes shows the painful torturous death of a man named Artemio Cruz who lies on his deathbed; his family scurrying around him; looking for the lastest edition of his will; while bitterly recounting different episodes of his and their lives. His wife was literally given to him by her father who Cruz swindles out of his old hacienda fortune; his daughter squirms at the literally decomposing body of her father who's dying of an instestinal blockage (among other things) while she plans her wedding to an insipid dandy lawyer; his doctor tries to treat him by his symptoms and disects him figuratively describing him in purely biological and medical terms but like most doctors in most situations there's pretty much nothing he can; do the prognosis is pretty much hopeless; the man is literally dying. Cruz himself is a power-wielding totalitarianist who rules his little fiefdom with an iron fist; he's an opportunist; if given the chance he'll kick a man when he's down; he has very little sympathy for idealism or love; he's lost that bit by bit; most of it's been torn away from him during the war when he lost his true love. One is left with a deep set feeling of pity for this man who's suffered so much and tortured so many people (including the reader) because he can never truly come to terms with getting his heart ripped out of him; you're almost glad when the book ends and he's remembering his early childhood and the narrator starts to recount his birth; he's uncorrupted at this point; naked; crying and in pain; his little body literally being thrust unto this earth and at the same time the doctors tear into him; his body's shutting down; the surgeons are cussing; cursing this decrepit old man's body which is turning into a mushy corpse...

This is not an easy book to read; not because it's disgusting or the words are too difficult; it's just that this man is so repulsive it's very difficult to continue reading this book; it's literally torture to read this book; but finishing it and getting to the end; putting this man to death and putting him in perspective at the same time; because this was a difficult read; you will come away satisfied that all that suffering Fuentes put you through was worth it.

Some books it brings to mind are Absalom, Absalom! by Faulkner and even maybe Wurthering Heights by Emily Bronte; if you're looking for a comparable parable. Read it; ...if you dare!


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