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Super Fantastic Travel Book in the Form of a Map!!Kewl
Everything you need in one map
First-rate and concise information in an easy to tote form

What Night Forgets
Poet's 1st Novel of Erotic Intrique in Mexico a MasterpieceAmerican 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

timless classic
ADVENTURE TRAVEL WRIGHTING AT ITS BEST!
Unabridged John Lloyd StephensUnlike 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.


Great first novel
ArroyoIn 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"

A lot of ideas for my new home
Mexico lindo/Beautiful Mexico
My decoration/collection bibleThe 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!!!!!


A great achivement in art/history commentary
The Code of Kings
A very nice and unexpected surprise

Amazing History, Bland Style
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 SubjectThis book gets the highest recommendation possible.
Blood and GoldIn 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 (Review)
Stunning Work
The Great Book

Mexico Finally
Los Mexicanos Defined
PAZ PERFECTLY DESCRIBES WHO MEXICANS ARE AND WHY THEY ARE

The long winding road
The moment of truth
Just shoot me in the head already (but not literally...)!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!