Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states Alamogordo Albuquerque Anthony Bernalillo Carlsbad Catron Chaves Cibola Clovis Cochiti_Pueblo Colfax Curry De_Baca Doaa_Ana Eastern_Plains Eddy Grant Guadalupe Harding Hidalgo Hobbs Jemez_Pueblo Las_Cruces Las_Vegas Lea Lincoln Los_Alamos Luna McKinley Mesilla Middle_Rio_Grande Mora North_Central Northwest Otero Quay Rio_Arriba Roosevelt Roswell Ruidoso Ruidoso_Downs San_Juan San_Miguel Sandoval Santa_Fe Sierra Silver Socorro South_Central Southeastern Southwest Taos Texico Torrance Union Valencia
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "New Mexico", sorted by average review score:

Stay Awhile: A New Mexico Sojourn (Red Crane Literature Series)
Published in Paperback by Red Crane Books (July, 1992)
Authors: Toby Smith and Greg Tucker
Average review score:

A must read for those interested in New Mexico
This is a great book even you are not interested in the state of New Mexico... and if you are that much the better. Toby, a journalist for the Albuquerque Tribune, looks at ordinary people, landmarks, and places in a way that brings them alive. He choses interesting subjects and then lets you feel that you've been there and met them. Very objective, interesting, and accurate.

Excellent reading
Toby Smith has an enviable ability to bring his subjects -- the people of New Mexico -- to life. My favorite story is "A Clean Sweep," but every one has something to enjoy. This is my second favorite book on New Mexico. My first is "New Mexico Odyssey," by the same author!


Stories and Stone: An Anasazi Reader
Published in Paperback by Pruett Publishing Co. (November, 1996)
Author: Reuben Ellis
Average review score:

a wonderful companion
The best literate companion for a trip to the four corners area of US. It has selections from writings touching all areas where curiousity may take you as you travel through the deserts and canyons of the Anasazi.

An unique and moving collection of writings!
Stories and Stone: Writing the Anasazi Homeland is a beautifully conceived, designed, and engaging work. The book sheds new light and understanding on the ancestral puebloan people. Reuben Ellis' forward and introductory essays to each excerpt engender a deeper appreciation and cultural awareness of the southwest and its history. Excerpts from Tony Hillerman, Wallace Stegner, Marietta Wetherill, Frank Waters, and Terry Tempest Williams were among my favorite--leaving me with a strong desire find and camp in a secluded canyon beneath the silent, ghostly ruins of the Anasazi


Surviving the Winter: The Evolution of Quiltmaking in New Mexico
Published in Hardcover by University of New Mexico Press (December, 2000)
Author: Dorothy R. Zopf
Average review score:

addendum to prior review
This book just won a 2000-2001 Southwest Book Award.

Delight in words and pictures.
Beneath each handmade quilt is a warm human being, and a fascinating story. Dorothy Zopf uncovers this material in her fascinating pastiche of oral histories. She pinpoints how what's available and what's needed combine with natural artistry to create lasting and functional treasures. The common thread that weaves this patchwork together is a texture of a place, of a time, and of a group of women who come alive in Zopf's deft hands. The stories and photos she has pieced together are not to be missed.


Thanks to Josefina (The American Girls Collection)
Published in Hardcover by Pleasant Company Publications (March, 2003)
Authors: Valerie Tripp, Jean-Paul Tibbles, Renee Graef, Susan McAliley, and Erin Falligant
Average review score:

A great book!
This is another one of the American Girls Short Stories series about Josefina Montoya, a nine-year-old girl living in the New Mexico of 1824. In this book, as the sisters work on blankets to save the rancho (see Josefina Learns a Lesson) the excitement of the project turns into drudgery, as each of the girls finds different chores irksome, and they begin to quarrel. But, while out gathering roots and nuts and things to make dyes for the wool, Josefina suddenly realizes that there is something that can bring the sisters back together.

The final chapter of this book is on Mexican blankets of 1824, and gives directions for dyeing a shirt with supplies from around the house. As I have always been quick to point out, Jean-Paul Tibbles' illustrations are excellent in quality and add to the experience of reading this great book. My daughter and I both enjoyed this book, and we recommend it to you.

Thank You, Josefina!
This is the fifth short story published about the American Girl, Josefina. The setting of this book is around the time period of "Josefina Learns a Lesson". Josefina's family has just experienced a terrible financial loss where a sudden flood killed many of the rancho's sheep. Tia Dolores and the girls have decided to recover the loss by weaving stored wool into wool blankets for trade to build up new a flock.

Josefina eagerly wants to please her Aunt with the new weaving business, but her sisters quickly turn on her for the hard work they now have to do "Thanks to Josefina". Teresita, Tia Dolores servant who teaches Josefina to weave, takes the discouraged Josefina on a walk to look for plants for dyes and gently helps her understand how many colors can contribute to each rug they weave. Soon, her sisters find something that they can genuinely thank Josefina for as they learn to work together more peacefully!

I enjoyed this short story because it integrated Josefina's skill and knowledge of plants, which was introduced in "Happy Birthday, Josefina". "Thanks to Josefina" identifies several regional plants for dyes, and includes a project where readers can make their own dye from an onion to tie-dye a t-shirt.


Tombstone: An Iliad of the Southwest
Published in Unknown Binding by ()
Authors: Walter Noble Burns and University of New Mexico
Average review score:

Best ever book about Wyatt Earp?
I read somewhere that more movies have been made about Wyatt Earp than all the U.S. presidents combined! There's something about the gunfight at the O.K. Corral that touches the mainspring of American imagination. Tombstone is the book that made Wyatt Earp famous and shaped forever our perception of him. I read Tombstone first when I was in high school back in the 1950s and I've since dipped into it countless times. Some might object to the author's purple prose and made-up dialogue and newer scholarly studies of the Earps and Tombstone may be more accurate and balanced. But Burns drew his material from interviews with old-timers and Tombstone newspapers and I'm confident that he comes about as close to fact as you can get. This is a magical tale and nobody could tell it any better than Burns.

great book and insight to the old west
tombstone the Iliad of the Southwest was a very informative book that keep me entertained as well as learning about the history of the people that shaped the southwest.I was very impressed how the author was able to interview many of the characters or speak to people that lived through that era.The book being writted in 1927 really brought out alot of history that would otherwise be lost.


Tularosa
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (November, 1980)
Author: C. L. Sonnichsen
Average review score:

The definitive book on the area
I give this book to every friend I know who professes in interest in El Paso and Southern New Mexico. A good read, and a wealth of information.

Absolutely outstanding.
This is a magnificent work. I was born and raised in the Tularosa Basin and I feel Sonnichsen does a remarkable job capturing the very essence of this enchanted region. I hightly recommend it to anyone who has an interest in the Southwest, especially those who have lived in the Basin. -Steve Gazzoli


Welcome to Josefina's World 1824: Growing Up on America's Southwest Frontier (American Girls Collection (Cloth))
Published in Hardcover by Pleasant Company Publications (October, 1999)
Authors: Yvette LA Pierre, Peg Ross, Jodi Evert, Laszlo Kubinyi, and Jamie Young
Average review score:

What a World!
"Josefina's World" is an excellent supplement to the Josefina chapter books and short stories. Although each chapter book and short story has a section in the back with historical information that is relevant to the story in the book, "Josefina's World" is a colorful, informative historical overview with the kinds of information that readers will most want to know. There are wonderful cut-away pictures of Josefina's rancho and of a pueblo, which many children will find appealing. The experiences of birth, childhood, and marriage are covered along with fashion, cleanliness, faith, health and medicine, and the importance of the role of the community. Stories of real people of the time and the retelling of the folk tale of "La Llorona" supplement the text. Historical information slips in with the coming of the Spanish, the blending of Pueblo and Spanish cultures, the significance of trade from Mexico City and the Santa Fe Trail, and the coming of the Americans in the mid-nineteenth century. The text is divided into short sections that are easy to read and full of accurate, important historical information. The pictures show delightful representations of colonial New Mexico and even someone who does not read the text will get a comprehensive view of Josefina's World.

My 9 year old daughter loves it!
Great book full of wonderful pictures and great historic information. My daughter can spend hours exploring the book time and time again.


Zapotec Civilization: How Urban Society Evolved in Mexico's Oaxaca Valley (New Aspects of Antiquity)
Published in Hardcover by Thames & Hudson (April, 1996)
Authors: Joyce Marcus and Kent Flannery
Average review score:

great book
What a good enjoyable book. This is how archaeologists should try to write most of the times. A book on a little known part of MExico, archaeologically, written in plain english. It provides a great overview of the origins and the rise of Zapotec Civilization until the abandonment of its main site at Monte Alban ca 700 AD. It also provides a refreshing new approach called actin theory, viewing history as determined by the actions of real people, not untangible forces of the environment or society. Classic.

Wonderful book
I really, really, really liked this book. If I could have given it 6 stars I probably would have! The authors of Zapotec Civilization have covered the field nicely for this small segment of the perhistoric Middle American world and have set it clearly amidst the other contemporary cultures of the region, most notably that at Teotihuacan. Kent Flannery is one of THE names in the field of Middle American anthropology and archaeology and the quality of the volume shows why. I am less knowledgeable about Ms Marcus, although the vita provided by the book itself suggests an impressive intellectual treasure here as well. I enjoyed the volume enough to keep it to read another time. A rare kudo, believe me.


100 Hikes in New Mexico (100 Hikes in)
Published in Paperback by Mountaineers Books (March, 2002)
Author: Craig Martin
Average review score:

A must for the NM hiker.
This is a great book that really makes my camping trips. I have children and with this we know weather or not we can do a hike and where they are, a must for the New Mexico Hiker.


101 Tips for Outsmarting Diabetes
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Distributed Products (13 November, 2001)
Authors: Univ. of New Mexico Diabetes Care Team, David S. Schade, and American Diabetes Association
Average review score:

Provides an easy question-and-answer format
From understanding how blood sugars affect overall health to what constitutes appropriate exercise and how to judge the heatlh effects of fast food, 101 Tips For Simplifying Diabetes provides an easy question-and-answer format to answer some of the more common questions posed by diabetics. The format lends to an easier understanding of the condition than most would allow.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states Alamogordo Albuquerque Anthony Bernalillo Carlsbad Catron Chaves Cibola Clovis Cochiti_Pueblo Colfax Curry De_Baca Doaa_Ana Eastern_Plains Eddy Grant Guadalupe Harding Hidalgo Hobbs Jemez_Pueblo Las_Cruces Las_Vegas Lea Lincoln Los_Alamos Luna McKinley Mesilla Middle_Rio_Grande Mora North_Central Northwest Otero Quay Rio_Arriba Roosevelt Roswell Ruidoso Ruidoso_Downs San_Juan San_Miguel Sandoval Santa_Fe Sierra Silver Socorro South_Central Southeastern Southwest Taos Texico Torrance Union Valencia
More Pages: New Mexico Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44