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

ACCESS Santa Fe, Taos & Albuquerque
Published in Paperback by Access Pr (March, 1999)
Authors: Harper Collins and Sharon Lloyd Spence
Average review score:

ACCESS Guides are the BEST!
I always find the ACCESS Guides to be the best travel guides overall, and look for them whenever I am about to travel to a new location. So far, I have used their guides to Alb/SantaFe/Taos, Seattle, Montreal/Quebec City, Phoenix, San Francisco, Hawaii, San Diego, and London.

I like their format - they are organized by neighborhoods, so you don't have to seach around through the book all day; and they have an empasis on restaurants and shopping, which I find the other guides don't give enough info on and which are my FAVORITE activities when travelling. Also their print is large, clear, and color coded, which also makes it easy to find what you want (restaurants in one color, shopping in another, tourist sites in another).

It's the best guide to carry around each day while travelling.


Acoma & Laguna Pottery
Published in Paperback by School of American Research Press (August, 1992)
Author: Rick Dillingham
Average review score:

A must for collectors of Native American pottery!
Elliott and co authors have captured the essence of Acoma and Laguna in their pictures and text of this highly collectible Native American pottery. As a small collector of this pottery, I have learned so much more from this wonderful book! If you are on a "hunt" for Acoma and Laguna collectibles, I recommend you take this book along with you.


Adventure Guide to New Mexico
Published in Paperback by Hunter Publishing, Inc. (July, 1996)
Authors: Rankin Harvey, Dave Houser, Steve Cohen, and Steven Cohen
Average review score:

See the Real New Mexico!
I used this book as a guide for a two-week driving trip through New Mexico. It was fantastic! I was especially glad I took it along -- because I lost a day due to a flat tire and it was so easy to change my plans and not feel like I was missing out on something great. The details are excellent and the authors must have truly enjoyed researching the restaurants, lodging, and points of interest. Good choices, all!


Albuquerque: Where the World Celebrates Ballooning
Published in Paperback by Amer World Geographic Pub (December, 1997)
Author: Treasure Chest Books
Average review score:

Just what we were looking for !
My wife is an Artist. One of the themes she likes to paint is ballooning. I bought several books on this subject. There was no reviews of this book "ALBUQUERQUE. Where the World Celebrates Ballooning". It is inexpensive, and I was concerned the book might be too descriptive, containing perhaps few pictures and an too much text with an emphasis on promoting tourism for New Mexico. What a great surprise! Other than a five page textual introduction (also with pictures inserted), the book is ALL pictures, the only text are short footers on the pictures. One hundred twenty pages and 200+ huge, colorful and artful photographs. A great buy!


Ancient Cities of the New World: Being Voyages and Explorations in Mexico and Central America from 1857-1882 (Antiquities of the New World, Vol 10)
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press (June, 1972)
Author: Desire Charnay
Average review score:

1st edition of Ancient Cities of the New World
For some 20 years since I discovered that the book I had is a 1st draft with a cover page addressed to Augustus H.Harvemeyer(?) and Peter F. Lorillard, have endevored to get much past the first 5 chapters.The woodcut or tin prints are incredibly detailed, each with a world of information to those willing to take the time to study them. Although Mr.Charnay occasionally wonders from his original train of thought, the book is an incredible piece of work, for its time and the effort that went into researching the subject covered. The significance of the signed cover page is the two names mentioned funded his expiditions to Central America.


Así es Josefina, una niña americana (The American Girls Collection)
Published in Paperback by Scott Foresman (Pearson K-12) (September, 1997)
Authors: Valerie Tripp, Jose Moreno, Jean-Paul Tibbles, and Susan McAliley
Average review score:

A GREAT TRANSLATION OF A WONDERFUL BOOK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I've enjoyed the American Girls Collection books for years, and was thrilled to see that Josefina's books from the American Girls Series were printed in Spanish as well as English. Jose Moreno does an excellent job translating Josefina's books into Spanish--the story stays the same as if you were reading the original English version--nothing is lost. This book, like the English one, tells the story of how Josefina's family copes with the death of Josefina's mother, and how Tia Dolores comes to stay with them. Even more funny is the story of Tia Dolores's piano, which sounds even more funny in the Spanish version than it does in English. I hope that one day the rest of the books in the American Girls series--the adventures of Felicity, Kirsten, Addy, Samantha, Kit, and Molly--will one day be available in Spanish as well.

Candace


The authentic life of Billy the Kid : the noted desperado of the Southwest, whose deeds of daring and blood made his name a terror in New Mexico, Arizona, and northern Mexico
Published in Unknown Binding by Time Life ()
Author: Pat F. Garrett
Average review score:

A valuable book because of the relationship of the author


The introduction to this book by J.C. Dyke is good, and explains a lot; especially the last paragraph, wherein he says,"The reading (and study) of [this book] is essential to an uderstanding of that mythical hero, the Robin Hood of the Southwest, who was once just a bucktoothed, thieving, murderous little cowboy-gone-bad, Billy the Kid."

Of course, the author, Pat Garrett, was not an unprejudiced reporter of events, for it was he who ended the life of William Bonney, also known as William Antrim (his foster father's surname). It is also interesting I think, in passing, to mention that Billy the Kid was not a product of the West, but a transplanted New Yorker.

Elsewhere, you will read that Pat Garrett's writing effort is poor, and leaves much to be desired. He readily admits it. In his own words, he says, "I make no pretension to literary ability, but propose to give to the public in intelligible English, 'a round, unvarnished tale,' unadorned with superfluous verbiage."

Garrett is motivated, he says, by an "impulse to correct the thousand false statements which have appeared in the newspapers and in yellow-covered cheap novels."

And, there is no doubt at all that the stories of Billy's exploits were greatly exaggerated by an Eastern press eager for stories of gunplay and adventure on the Western frontier. Today's myth of Billy the Kid is largely descended from the pulp stories created by the inflamed minds of Eastern "journalists" and the latter-day Hollywood screen-writers who have made no attempt at all to portray the truth.

Pat Garrett claims to have known Billy throughout the period known as the "Lincoln County Wars," and having listened to Bonney's reminiscences around campfires and says he has interviewed many persons since Bonney's death. That much would seem to be undisputed.

Bonney was born in 1859, six years after the birth of another Southwestern hardcase, John Wesley Hardin. In fact, they were contemporaries and were raising hell at the same time. Bonney, however, died young at the age of 21, in 1881. Hardin died at the age of 42--twice Billy's age--in 1895. And, if the rumors are true, Hardin probably killed twice as many men. They both started young. Both are reputed to have had fearful tempers. Neither were killed in the face-to-face "quick draw" shootouts so dear to the hearts of Hollywood writers. Instead, both of their executioners used stealth to kill their quarries.

According to Garrett, in Pete Maxwell's darkened bedroom, where he shot Billy to death, Billy was holding a butcher knife in one hand and drawing his double-action Colt "Lightning" revolver ("self-cocker") with the other, while asking in Spanish, "Quien es? Quien es?" ("Who is it? Who is it?") They were, again according to Garrett, at point blank range. The only other witness was Pete Maxwell. There are other versions to the story, including one which insists that Bonney was unarmed except for the knife, which he had used to cut off a chunk of beef from a hanging carcass outside, because he was hungry.

My question is this: it is undisputed that he was holding the knife, and the reason for which he had it. So, where was the beef? It is unlikely that he ate it raw, or stuck it in a pocket. Probably he was holding it in his other hand, intending to cook it. In which case, if he had a revolver tucked in his waistband, he must have had to drop the beef to fetch his revolver.

It is probably of little importance; a Billy Bonney armed with a butcher knife, at close quarters, would still have needed killing. But, did he make the fatal mistake of coming to a gunfight armed only with a knife?

I think that this is an important book, if for no other reason than the relationship that existed between the author and William Bonney. I recommend it. My version is in the hard cover.

Joseph Pierre


The Aztec (A New True Book)
Published in Paperback by Children's Book Press (November, 1900)
Authors: Pat McKissack and Fredrick L. McKissack
Average review score:

It was the best book that I read other then a hisorty book.
I think that this was the best book that I read. it was even better then a history book. It made me feel as if I was there whne this took place. I had a hard time putiing it down. by using this book I got an A on my term paper.


The Beautiful and the Dangerous: Encounters With the Zuni Indians
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (April, 2001)
Author: Barbara Tedlock
Average review score:

A Great Alternative Ethnography
I really enjoyed reading Tedlock's work. The writing reverses the notion of "participant observation" to the "observation of participation." Instead of a removed, monological account, we are offered a polyphony of voices, including the authors. In fact, the ethnography reads much like a novel; however, these are real people with real stories to tell. The text offers a rich and evocative account of the Zuni people and their experiences in the borderzone between the past and present. Tedlock's work and writing strategies were central to the writing of my own ethnographic account of a Southeastern Native American Tribe in search of a visible past--the Pee Dee of South Carolina (Title: Native Americans in the Carolina Borderlands: A Critical Ethnography, Carolinas Press, 2000). Tedlock's ethnography is a must read for those on the verge of engaging ethnography, no matter the methodological bent, and students and academics interested in Native American Studies, Cultural Studies, Cultural Anthropology, and alternative ethnography.


Begoso Cabin: A Pecos Country Retreat
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (October, 1999)
Authors: Mari Grana and Mari Graana
Average review score:

Begoso Cabin warms the heart & piques the adventurous spirit
Begoso Cabin is the account of a woman's experiences living in a remote canyon in the mountains of northern New Mexico. The author has described the land, the animals, the people in vivid detail. The book is replete with pleasing morsels of historical research beginning with the Pecos Indians who once hunted the area, the region's importance as the entry into Mexican territory on the Santa Fe Trail, the takeover of the Southwest by the United States, the legal hassles over the old Spanish land grant on which the Begoso cabin is located, to today's village customs and economy. Begoso Cabin partakes of a genre of women's writing that is characterized by such authors as Annie Dillard, Dorothy Gilman, Gretel Ehrlach and others who have retreated to the wilds to write their stories. Begoso Cabin is a good read, full of historical, and often humorous, anecdotes, sensitve landscape description, and sociological commentary on village life rendered in a vibrant and poetic prose.


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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