New Mexico Books


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New Mexico Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

New Mexico
Benchmark Washington Road & Recreation Atlas (Benchmark Map: New Mexico Road & Recreation Atlas)
Published in Paperback by Benchmark (2004-07-30)
Author: Benchmark Maps
List price: $22.95
New price: $12.92
Used price: $12.92

Average review score:

Great recreation road map.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
This map is great for helping you locate those out of the way gravel roads that are not included on most maps. This is not a good map for city driving. My main dissapointment is that it does not include all of those little lakes in Washington such as all of the seep lakes near Potholes Reservior.

Great "Landscape" Style Maps
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-19
I moved to Washington recently and needed to get some good paper maps of the area. Though I have all the USGS maps of the pacific NW, I find the "landscape" style mapping of these types of maps extremely useful and more up-to-date than many USGS quads. I debated between the well-known Delorme and Benchmark. Benchmark won with better detail, easier to read maps, better recreation details, and the fact they're a Pacific NW company.

This map book has large-format maps for the entire state, US map, a full state map, and a pacific NW map. Map details are complete including roads, "off" roads, trails, mountain elevations, place names, political lines, and others. It also has great sections for recreation (camping, hiking, fishing, local attractions, and others), climate data, and other nice details about the areas. Navigation with GPS is made easy by 7'30" latitude and longitude sections.

I do wish the scale was a little smaller - finding trails and off-the-beaten-path roads can be difficult in particularly busy areas. I also desired more accurate elevation details - the scale seems to clump 8,000' and 14,000' peaks together. Overall, these are excellent maps and should help any outdoor lover find their way.

New Mexico
The Best Recipes from New Mexico's B and Bs
Published in Spiral-bound by New Mexico Magazine (2005-01-16)
Author:
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.67
Used price: $4.99
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

Wow your guests
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-25
Every recipe I have tried has been extraordinary. I am purchasing more of these cookbooks as gifts to those who have asked for recipes.

Great if you love that Southwest flavor!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-13
I bought this cookbook for a gift while vacationing in Ruidoso, New Mexico. They only had one left to buy and I want one for myself. If you like cookbooks, you will enjoy this one!

New Mexico
Beyond the Killing Tree: A Journey of Discovery
Published in Hardcover by Epicenter Press (1995-09-01)
Author: Stephen Reynolds
List price: $19.95
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Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

To Kill or Not to Kill?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-24
This is a story of outdoor adventure and personal transition. These hunting tales are humorous, touching, and sometimes tragic, and through them runs the silent question: to kill or not to kill?

Memoir of a Game Warden in New Mexico and Alaska
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-28
In a refreshingly original western voice, Stephen Reynolds tells his life story. As a game warden, he explores the wonders of wild, untamed places such as the Gila Wilderness of New Mexico, and the Brooks Range and Yukon Delta of Alaska. He meets people who use the land to live and people who live to abuse it. His is the heritage of a boy raised as a hunter, drawn to the excitement of the kill, but who experiences transform him into an outspoken protector of wildlife. Yet, this is no sermon or manifesto. Stephen Reynolds offers adventure, spiritual change, and transformation - but no easy answers. B&W illustrations.

New Mexico
Blessed Assurance: At Home With the Bomb in Amarillo, Texas
Published in Paperback by Univ of New Mexico Pr (1988-03)
Author: A. G. Mojtabai
List price: $10.95
New price: $1.19
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $12.50

Average review score:

Build the Bomb and Expect the End
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-31
The author deals with the presence of the Pantex plant in Amarillo, the only final assembly factory for nuclear weapons, warheads and bombs, in the US, and the attitudes of residents toward the plant. She analyzes in some detail the personal and group philosophies of war, peace, safety, and the future.

She analyzes the concepts of safety in the views of residents, both the security provided by the bomb as a deterrent and the danger of the bomb as a provocation to nuclear war or to an attack on their town as a production center. Fascinating is her analysis of the religious views accommodating, or in a few cases opposing, the presence of nuclear weapons, and the future in light of their possible use.

She explores the various religious views of the End Time of churches in Amarillo. She gives attention to the views and attitudes of individual members of churches who work in the bomb factory.

Compelling Story for Everyone
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-08
I first read this book in college in a theory of religion class. But don't be put off by that. This is the story of the people in Amarillo TX who build nuclear warheads. Most of the community are born-again Christians who are Rapturists -- they welcome the end of the world. Their story is contrasted with those people in the town and all over who are against nuclear war. It is an unbelievable sociological tale, and Mojtabai writes with compelling impartiality. She tells the whole story in a way that reads like one of the best novels I have ever read. I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in human nature. It will blow you away.

New Mexico
Blessed Resistance: Poems
Published in Paperback by Mariposa Printing & Publishing Co (1999-07)
Author: Joan Logghe
List price: $14.00
New price: $14.00
Used price: $4.87

Average review score:

lots of talent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-27
Joan is a very talented poet whose work is lyrical, fun, real, true! All of her work reads well.

Graceful, hopeful, and wonderful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-01
This collection is a triptych of poems that focus on culture, family, and the personal landscape of marriage. Logghe writes of the beauty of northern New Mexico's Espanola Valley and the problems experienced by an outsider upon entering this special place. She has lived in New Mexico for 18 years and spent 15 years writing these poems. Check out "Something like Marriage." Graceful, hopeful, and wonderful.

New Mexico
Breakfast Santa Fe Style
Published in Paperback by Sunstone Press (2006-03-15)
Authors: Kathy Barco and Valerie Nye
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.00
Used price: $9.99
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

They also recommend a book for every restaurant
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-21
This is a terrific book: a great concept (they recommend children's or adult books to read while you're eating) & interesting writing. Every entry's different enough, so the book's amusing all the way though. As a native New Mexican, I found lots of restaurants to try that I'd never heard of - & as a librarian, new books to enjoy. Highly recommended!
Suzy Sultemeier
Retired librarian with the Albuquerque Public Libraries

An informative, fun, and easy-to-use reference collection of restaurants, diners, pubs, grills, and clubs of the Santa Fe area
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-04
Expertly co-authored by New Mexico-based freelance writer Kathy Barco & Valerie Nye (Assistant Professor and Serials Librarian at the College of Santa Fe), Breakfast Santa Fe Style: A Dining Guide To Fancy, Funky, And Family Friendly Restaurants is an informative, fun, and easy-to-use reference collection of restaurants, diners, pubs, grills, and clubs of the Santa Fe area. Presenting readers with an expansive compendium of local favorites, hard to find particulars, and homey, "family friendly" restaurants, Breakfast Santa Fe Style offers a quick and simple method of finding "Fancy, Funky, Family Friendly, and Fast" places, suitable for the likes of any Santa Fe culinary connoisseur. Breakfast Santa Fe Style is very highly recommended for visitors and residents of the Santa Fe area for its extensive and acute knowledge of the best local dining facilities that will enhance any personal or family outing.

New Mexico
The Canadian Frontier, 1534-1760 (Histories of the American Frontier)
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (1983-08-01)
Author: W. J. Eccles
List price: $24.95
New price: $8.45
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Average review score:

The Canadian Frontier
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-27
W. J. Eccles did a phenomenal job in covering the history of New France. I was expecting a dry history. I didn't get one. What I got was a story of men and a few women.

This book is a facinating account of the settlement of Canada under the French. For a history book, it was hard to put down. Eccles brought the problems of starting and maintaining a colony to life. He presents historical figures like Frontenac and La Salle as real people who made real mistakes without excuses or whitewashing.

I would recommend this book to anyone doing any type of research into New France.

An Indispensable History Of New France
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-07
"The Canadian Frontier" is an excellent exposition of the story of the interface between Canadian and native civilizations from 1534-1760. As the Canadian frontier included much of the Midwest, this book is a good choice for both American and Canadian readers with an interest in the history of New France.

Prof. Eccles makes the point that the Canadian frontier is conceptionally different from the American frontier. The American frontier was a geographical concept, the line where settlement gave way to wilderness. The Canadian frontier, by contrast, was a series of settled islands in a sea of wilderness at which civilization "did business" with native cultures.

One test of a good historical book is whether it changes the reader's view of history. This one passes that test. I had always viewed the competition between the French, British and Indians in North America as being based on basic nationalistic and tribal rivalries. Prof. Eccles explains the rivalry in terms of an economic competition over the fur trade. The roles of the Indians was to supply the furs. The locations of the trade shifted over time between the eastern settlements, western trading posts and in Indian villages at which traders visited. Traders competed in goods offered, while tribes competed, at times by war, to control access to traders and their goods. Middleman profits were often at stake.

The economy of New France is contrasted with that of the British colonies. The economy of the British colonies was largely based on farming while the economy of New France was, primarily, extractive, based on the fur trade and, to a lesser extent, fishing. Farming in New France was, initially, merely to supply the settlers. As population increased and the fur trade declined, New France evolved from a trading to an agricultural colony.

The trading pattern of New France determined land use practices as well as relations with the Indian tribes. I had always thought of low populations of New France as a reflection of the unwillingness of the French to migrate to North America. From this book I learned that low population density was indispensable to a fur trade based economy.

Like the Spanish to the West, and unlike the English to the south, evangelization was a major part of the interaction on the Canadian Frontier. Much of the exploration and development was instituted or accompanied by missionaries.

Over time, the Canadian Frontier was changed by tribal wars which determined the access of each tribe to western traders and their wares. Although Indians are often portrayed as victims of white aggression, the truth is that they acquired a dependency on European goods which contributed to their own downfall.

The military aspects of the North American wars are interesting in that they relate the relative contributions of the Regular forces, the militia and the Indians. Another of my conceptions which was changed by this book was that the outcome of the French and Indian war was dictated by the colonial population imbalance. Prof. Eccles makes the case that the fighting qualities of the French militia made them dominant over the English militias and that it was only the skills of the British regulars against the bungling of the French regulars which won the war for Britain.

Ultimately, the world in which the Canadian Frontier arose and prospered changed and the Frontier disappeared. The French and Indian War restricted the numbers of voyagers to a handful. The vision of the French habitants changed from that of an open continent in which to trade for furs, to a river valley in which to farm and sell their produce. The leadership of the fur trade changed from French entrepreneurs to British businessmen. The British, who fought to wrest the Ohio Valley from the French, tried to close it to their own colonists. Ultimately, the colonials who fought to take the Ohio Valley from the French took it from the British with French aid. The Indians who had tried to play one power against the other, found that, in contributing to the downfall of the French regime, they had traded a benevolent, cooperative colonial power for one which would take their land and destroy their culture.

Professor Eccles has told the early history of much of our continent with insight and a skilled writing style. The supporting notes and bibliography guide the reader to sources for further research and reading. "The Canadian Frontier" is a must for anyone with an interest in the history of New France.
.

New Mexico
Capirotada: A Nogales Memoir
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (1999-08-01)
Author: Alberto Alvaro Ríos
List price: $16.95
New price: $16.95
Used price: $0.02
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

MOST ENCHANTING ACCOUNT OF GROWING UP IN A MULTI- HUED PLACE
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-10
Sometimes you just want to read something that warms your heart. Something that is so rich and abundant with kindliness and warmth that you have to pause several times in your reading to ponder and absorb. The author must have been a very "nice boy." A nice boy with kaleidoscope vision and compassion.

Nothing fancy. Just plain home-cooking, albeit sometimes spicy, like the chilaquilas recipe in the book, which incidently, is wonderful!

My Childhood Town
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-17
I have never read a book about my hometown. This book took me back to my childhood days, and what it meant to grow up in a border town where everyone knew each other, everyone was friendly, there was no racism and you could sleep with the door unlocked, leave your keys in the car and it was safe. It also brought sadness at the same time, since Nogales is not the same Nogales of the fifties, sixties, seventies and even part of the eighties. It has grown extensively, has crime, and is no longer the little friendly town I once knew and loved.

Albert was at Nogales High School at the same time as I. He has truly written a BEAUTIFUL memoir of what my little childhood town was.I knew his family, his father married my husband and I and his mom pierced my ears. I was saddened by the fact that his father had passed away,(since we moved to culture shock California 10 years ago,I don't have much contact with Nogalians). But, believe me,you don't have to be from Nogales to enjoy this little marvel of a book.

New Mexico
Carlos and the Cornfield / Carlos y la milpa de maiz
Published in Paperback by Luna Rising (1999-12-25)
Author: Jan Romero Stevens
List price: $6.95
New price: $3.27
Used price: $3.50

Average review score:

Fun
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
We speak Spanish and want our children to learn, so we purchased this book. The story is fun and the pictures are nice. We read it to them in Spanish, and they read it in English, as it has both languages. Our hopes are that when they become familiar with the story, they will read it in Spanish too!

Great story and recipe!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-19
A wonderful story for Kindergarten-3rd grade readers. Recipe for cornmeal pancakes is outstanding and both my girls loved it. The pancakes are tender, flavorful, and have a slight crunch from the cornmeal. I serve the pancakes smeared with strawberry jam and my girls won't eat pancakes any other way.

New Mexico
Carlos and the Squash Plant / Carlos y la planta de calabaza
Published in Paperback by Luna Rising (1999-07-25)
Author: Jan Romero Stevens
List price: $6.95
New price: $3.17
Used price: $0.69

Average review score:

Carlos and the squash plant
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-02
This book is extremely funny. Most of the children hate to take baths. This book has beautiful colored pages and the Spanish language is clear, fluent and well used. I recommend this book to be use in the classroom for English language learners or for dual inmersion settings.

Carlos hates to take a bath
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-02
I am a Kindergarten teacher who has read this book to many classes. They love it! Many little children relate to Carlos and his aversion to baths. I understand there are flaws in the translation, but, as a read aloud for children it scores big.


Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Addictions-->Substance Abuse-->Centers and Counseling Services-->United States-->New Mexico-->26
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