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

No Lack of Lonesome
Published in Paperback by Farolito Press (14 February, 2001)
Author: Albino Gonzales
Average review score:

Simple Story, Profound Wisdom
Because of the riveting power of the pen of author Albino Gonzales in NO LACK OF LONESOME, we are introduced to wisdom and presented with such art and simplicity, that not only children but adults will enjoy it. As autor Gonzales takes us up the mountain path with Nana and the boy, Mio, we observe the boy move from shame for his grandmother's calloused hands and apron, to pride in her wisdom and the poetry of her soul. What a joyous moment when the boy's discovery that his Nana cannot read or write, is turned to jubilation with her words, "Dios me ha dado una pluma, God has given me a pen." The boy Mio continues to explain, "She squeezed my head closer, as if putting me in her pocket and repeated, "God has given me a pen." If every family were to share this book, reading and discussing it together, family unity would grow. Certainly, every school library should own at least one copy of NO LACK OF LONESOME, for seldom do we find a book with such a capacity to teach, which also offers such enjoyment that the reader does not wish to put it down.


North America's Greatest Bird Hunting Lodges and Preserves: More Than 200 Prime Destinations in the United States, Canada & Mexico
Published in Paperback by Willow Creek Press (May, 2000)
Author: John Ross
Average review score:

north americas greatest bird hunting lodges and preserves
This is undoubtedly the best book on bird hunting in a very,very long time.It has given the reader the "Who,what,when, and where",in specific and pleasant language, with some inviting photos of the lodges.The author has skillfully gone from areas to hunt that are either almost free, to the quite expensive, using the same exacting detail about what kind of birds,their source,seasons,lodging availability,rates,directions to get there,...even down to tipping. A few paragraphs about each place makes you wish you were able to hunt them all.


Not the Triumph but the Struggle: The 1968 Olympics and the Making of the Black Athlete
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Minnesota Pr (Trd) (October, 2002)
Author: Amy Bass
Average review score:

It changed the way I watch TV!
I learned so much from this book. I thought that it might be too hard to read, but it was worth it: I will never watch sports -- especially the Olympics -- the same way again. There's too much to list contained here: the Olympics, the media, race, sexuality, women -- it goes on and on. I think everyone should read it.


Nuclear Reactions: The Politics of Opening a Radioactive Waste Disposal Site
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (March, 2003)
Author: Chuck McCutcheon
Average review score:

Toxic things & public policy
Chuck McCutcheon is an old classmate of mine, but I have to say that I found this to be a fine work. His book is direct and forceful in presenting the lengthy story of the creation of a facility to house radioactive waste. The author almost never bogs down in the technical or mundane even as the people he is writing about are doing exactly that. There's a lot to be learned from this book, namely, how Americans deal with periodic reminders that the unpleasant (or, in this case, deadly) byproducts of our military and technical might need to be dealt with, someway, somehow, somewhere.


Nueve presidentes civiles en el poder : del carisma desbordante de Alemán a la peligrosa indecisión de Zedillo
Published in Unknown Binding by EDAMEX ()
Author: Ignacio Castillo Mena
Average review score:

Good work!
I found this book pretty interesting!
If you really want to know how Mexico has been ruled, check it out!
Congratulations Mr. Castillo, very good work!


Nuevo México Profundo: Rituals of an Indo-Hispano Homeland
Published in Hardcover by Museum of New Mexico Pr (21 October, 2000)
Authors: Miguel A. Gandert, Enrique Lamadrid, Lucy R. Lippard, Chris Wilson, Miguel Grandert, Helen R. Lucero, and Ramon A. Gutierrez
Average review score:

Powerful images of archetype, myth, and heritage!
My 28-year residency in New Mexico ended with my recent move to California. Viewing Miguel Gandert's photographs opened the floodgates of memory in ways I had not anticipated.

Gandert's images carry the viewer into the most important dimension of ritual: the experiential element. Witnessing these ritual dances, even as a mere spectator, can be a moving experience. A vivid recollection of one New Year's Day at Jemez Pueblo Plaza comes to mind. I sat crosslegged on the ground at the inward-facing edge of the assembly, following the action of the Matachine dancers. A little boy portraying El Torito, the bull, was being chased by a whip-wielding Abuelo, who represents both wise elder and taunting clown. I held my hands over my head, feigning a protective gesture in mock fear, as they ran around me in ever tightening circles. The double-line pattern of the danzantes suddenly shifted and swept over me on both sides with ribbons flying in a swirl of color. In that moment I found all concept of time and structure collapsing into liminality. Afterwards, I became concerned that I might have inadvertently violated ritual space. Upon expressing my feelings to a tribal member, however, I was assured that no such transgression had taken place and that I might have even received a blessing.

The event described above could, no doubt, be interpreted quite differently from another standpoint and through another's eyes. Similarly, this book can be appreciated on many different levels. It's relevancy to universal elements and ritual may resonate with a widely diverse audience. Gandert and four knowledgeable essayists create a compelling cultural admixture of polarity and paradox. The resultant images emerge through layers of time, space, and history like so many bubbles from some deep, ancient well. This book is truly a verbal and visual treasure.

Readers interested in expanding their knowledge of the Matachines tradition will also find a valuable resource in The Matachines Dance: Ritual Symbolism and Interethnic Relations in the Upper Rio Grande Valley by Sylvia Rodriguez.


Oaxaca : tesoros de la Alta Mixteca
Published in Unknown Binding by Editor Grupo Azabache ()
Author: Jaime Ortíz Lajous
Average review score:

Excelente
Este libro es una maravilla, por sus fotos, sus textos y la calidad de edición. Lo recomiendo ampliamente a todos aquellos amantes de la zona de oaxaca


Oaxaca: The Spirit of Mexico
Published in Hardcover by Artisan Sales (June, 2002)
Authors: Judith Cooper Haden, Matthew Jaffe, and Phil Borges
Average review score:

A wondrous book brimming with festive spirit
Oaxaca: The Spirit Of Mexico is a heady, joyous celebration of Mexican life and culture. A vivid, coffee-table extravaganza packed cover to cover with gorgeous, full-color photographs taken by Judith Cooper Haden are embellished with insightful text commentary by Matthew Jaffe. Highly recommended reading for the armchair traveler, Oaxaca is a wondrous book brimming with festive spirit and a deep connection to Mexico's rich past and exciting future.


Old Father Story Teller
Published in Hardcover by Clear Light Pub (November, 1994)
Author: Pablita Velarde
Average review score:

Wonderful paintings, great, authentic Tewa stories

"The magic of Pablita Velarde is all here in this book." --R.C. Gorman (acclaimed Navajo artist)

"Pablita Velarde has told the story of her Santa Clara people throughout her career and has become a legend in her own time." --United Features Syndicate

The cover and title page painting -- titled Old Father Storyteller -- may be Pablita Velarde's best known work. The elder is shown telling people of the pueblo stories about the stars and constellations, which march in an arc across the sky. This painting, which Velarde was inspired to by her father's stories, won the Grand Prize at the 1955 Gallup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial.

It is also recognized by archaeoastronomers (scholars studying pre-contact native star lore) as one of the few records in which pueblo constallations can be identified, and star lore is told. (Long Sash is basically the familiar Orion, for example.) So that story has uses in Native-centered science. Beautiful uses.

There are 6 stories in the book, each with several of Pablita's fabulous paintings. "Turkey Girl" is the Tewa version of a Zuni storyteller's remake of Cinderella. Turkey Girl -- clad in finery by her flock of turkeys, instead of a fairy godmother -- goes to a dance, and is not recognized as the ragged orphan, courted by many men. But when she is found out by her mean stepmother, there's quite a different ending from Perrault's (and Disney's).

She doesn't wind up with any of those Indian men, indeed, those Prince Uncharmings are all chasing her to kill her for a witch! Some kind of big turkey spirit hides her; she disappears into a canyon with her flock. Turkeys are found no more by people hunting them for food. The moral and ethical meanings in this Indian transfiguration are very different from Cinderella. The only moral of that one is that nice clothes get you in anywhere. The Indian storytellers disagree.

Velarde says in her preface: "I was one of the fortunate children of my generation [she was born in 1918] who were probably the last to hear stories firsthand from Great-grandfather or Grandfather. I treasure that memory, and I have tried to preserve it in this book so that my children as well as other people may have a glimpse of what used to be."

Velarde's father was a respected Tewa storyteller in the Santa Clara Pueblo. She and her sisters as children had heard these stories during summer nights when they returned from Indian boarding school (where Native children were forced to go in US government attempts to destroy Indian culture by separating children from their families, language, and homes) to help their father farm his fields. In the late 1950's, when her marriage to Herbert Hardin, a non-Indian policeman, was breaking up, she returned to the Pueblo, recorded her father's stories and translated 6 of the most memorable into English for this book, which her paintings illustrate. The stories are told simply and clearly, as Pablita told them to her own children, and had been told them, as a child, by her father.

At that point in her life she was already an acclaimed artist, with the Bandolier National Monument murals, many prizes, and paintings in museums to her credit. In 1954, the French government had awarded her the Palmes Academiques for her outstanding contributions to art, the first time a European government had recognized Indian art as fine art, rather than primitive craft.

Dale Stuart King, who had hired her as to paint the accurate -- and artistic -- murals of traditional Pueblo life at Bandelier National Monument, liked the stories and published them in 1960. The book was chosen as one of the best Western books of 1960. This handsome reprint, 35 years later, uses improved color printing techniques to make Velarde's art available to children and others in highest quality. It's one of Clear Light Publishers' best-selling books, and they have (not on Amazon.com) a special slipcased, signed gift edition for $200, for rich folks with art-loving friends.

You can see some of Velarde's murals. at http://www.viva.com/nm/PCCmirror/murals.html. These murals in the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center are explained and shown, large and in details. In addition, see a painting by Pablita's daughter, artist Helen Hardin, who died untimely young, in 1984 at http://www.wingspread.com/fa/fa048.html.

Content and art reproductions and quality are identical in the paperback and hardcover versions of this book. Schools may need to get the paperback for cost reasons; parents and art-loving adults interested in Indian culture should get the hardcover, for permanence.

Reviewed by Paula Giese, editor, Native American Books website, http://www.fdl.cc.mn.us/~isk/books/bookmenu.html


On the Boulevard of the Galleons
Published in Paperback by Paradise Cay Publications (January, 1995)
Authors: Wallace B. Farrell, Channing Rudd, and Sandra J. Burns
Average review score:

Great Sailing Adventure Laced With History And Humor!
I gather the author wrote of his sailing adventures with the help of his significant other, Sandra Burns. They did what most of us only dream about -- left the security of job and home bound for foreign ports aboard a 40' sailboat. They sailed for several years. This book is a wonderful expose' of their sailing adventures in Mexican waters aboard "Abrazo II", an Acapulco 40 Cutter. "Boulevard" is without a doubt the best adventure book ever written about Mexico. It is a tribute to the authors' inimitable flair, as well as to the culture they experienced during their voyage. This book should be on the shelf of every sailor plying Mexican waters, and those dreaming about it


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Maine
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