New Mexico Books


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

New Mexico
Sadie Orchard (The Time of Her Life)
Published in Paperback by (2006)
Author:
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Used price: $200.00

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Review of Patsy Crow King's "Sadie Orchard, The time of her life"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
This short book is a delightful read. Sadie's history and her success in the oldest profession is treated in a sensitive and humorous manner, providing some insight into life at a very specific location in the Old West at the end of the 19th century. The "then-and-now" photos are fascinating. I bought a copy for a friend.

Sadie was a 'Character'--But She Made Her Mark
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-09
Patsy Crow King has certainly got hold of a fascinating figure to write about in this book. More than just a dry, museum piece about life in the late 19th century, King uses original stories taken from real newspapers of the era to bring her story, and her characters, to life.
In a time when guns and strong whisky and salty language were the order of the day,we meet up with the lady they called the Belle of the Black Range Mountains of Southwest New Mexico, an area rife with the chaos and high-spirited living of miners in a boomtown area. Sadie happened to be one tough lady in the middle of a Man's World. Like other
determined women full of 'spit' and vinegar--Annie Oakley comes to mine--Sadie had to stake her claim and make her stand.
While she has been cited in later publications as being the owner of a restaurant, a hotel and the first woman to own and ride in her own stage line, she was, first and foremost, the area's most successful madam.
The language and names that abound in Sadie's world are nothing if not colorful. Her "house" was located on Virtue Avenue! Her "girls" had names unthinkable in today's PC world: Lousy Lou, Deaf Connie and Jew Etta. "Dog Face" Connelly and Pretty Sam were two of the area's most prominent citizens. And, when a wary customer dawdled over his breakfast, Sadie stood over him and asked, "Whatsa matter with them aigs?
You want 'em doner?"
It is Pretty Sam's ebullient Christmas Eve Party, to which everybody in the area is invited, that provides the high dramatic moment in the book. A single young lady is introduced, and we learn she has two suitors for the evening. Being that everyone in those days was liberally armed, and usually heavily liquored up, you wait with anticipation to see if this evening of merrymaking will survive this precarious situation intact.
There happen to be other instances where gunplay plays a part in the story. Henry Orchard, who takes Sadie to wife and runs the stage line with her, turns into a casualty at Sadie's hands when she grows tired of his drinking and runs "the wretched man" out of town with "a final salute by letting him have both barrels."
King's obvious affection for her heroine propels the book forward. Besides showing Sadie's ingenious ability in business, King puts Sadie's very real generosity on display, too. Sadie leads a drive to build a church in the area at one point and, much later in her life, after a flood and subsequent influenza outbreak decimate the area, Sadie becomes "doctor, nurse, undertaker and comforter" for many of the unfortunate victims.
In analyzing Sadie's life just after she has passed on, a biographer concludes that St. Peter would have reviewed her credentials for admission to the Pearly Gates and "issued her a pass to the reserved seats." Then, this same writer pronounces judgment on who Sadie was: "Wherever she is, Sadie is a character."
Besides chronicling Sadie and her times, the book provides updated material that documents the area. Archival photos show how they lived then, and a group of new photos taken by Bill King, the author's husband, gives a current picture of the way the area looks now.
This is one book that opens up history to the readers and affords a glimpse into a lively, swashbuckling time that will probably never come again. It is informative and entertaining without "running on" (it's less than 100 pages, is double-spaced, has numerous pictures).
It is recommended reading.

New Mexico
Santa Fe
Published in Hardcover by Gibbs Smith, Publisher (2004-11-19)
Author: Kingsley Hammett
List price: $39.95
New price: $8.98
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Awesome quality & great information
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
The speed in which I received my book was wonderful - and I can't remember the last time a book that was used was in such great quality!
Thanks for making my Christmas a Merry One!

A Beautiful Book About A Beautiful City
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-18
I visited Santa Fe 20 years ago and was charmed by the city, enough so that I moved here and have made it my home. I keep meeting other people with the same story.

So what a pleasure it is to find this beautifully photographed love song to Santa Fe! The historical photos are fascinating. I recognize some of the spots, but many places have changed so much. The nice thing is that Santa Fe, while growing and changing, retains is charm and its easygoing atmosphere.

This book is a treasure.

New Mexico
Santa Fe in a Week: More or Less
Published in Paperback by Clear Light Books (2003-11)
Authors: Joel B. Stein and Marcia Keegan
List price: $14.95
Used price: $2.47

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A Really Good Source
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-18
When I first received this book I was dismayed because it included alot of web links. However, after I started reading it I realized it was really a very good condensed book chock full of information and one doesn't have to go to the links in order to enjoy this book. We're going to Santa Fe for one week and this book has been a great help in narrowing down exactly where we want to go and what we want to do. I highly recommend it.

Santa Fe in a week
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-02
I love this book. It is so helpful and chock full of information.
Now that I have a computer I really appreciate all the email addresses.
The writting is clear and full of information and the photos are really nice and also helpful. This book will make my next trip to Santa Fe more enjoyable and easy to plan.

New Mexico
Santa Fe: History of an Ancient City
Published in Paperback by School of American Research Press (1989-08-01)
Author: David Grant Noble (Editor)
List price: $19.95
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An excellent illustrated history
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-25
Santa Fe will be 400 years old next year, and this beautifully illustrated and written book was issued in commemoration of its rich history.

There are eleven chapters, nine dealing with various historical eras in the city's history: high desert living before the formation of the city, the founding, the Pueblo Revolt, the Spanish Restoration, 25 years as a Mexican town, the U.S. occupation, the Santa Fe Trail, the Palace of Governors and a history of histories of the city. Each chapter is written by a recognized expert in the area, and each is illustrated with many black and white images.

Two chapters were particularly interesting to me. "Españols, Castas, y Labradores" by Adrian H. Bustamante is a very careful analysis of the the complex mixing and cross mixing of different ethnic backgrounds. "One's social position was determined by the degree of pureza de sangre española that flowed in one's veins. To have been born in Spain, especially in Castile, gave one the highest classification possible -- penninsular." Pure españoles who had been born in the New World had the marginally lower status of Criollos (Creoles)." The book lists on page 54 (you may be able to retrieve a copy through the Amazon Search this Book function) 22 separate "castas" typical of the 18th century: mestizo, castizo, otrna a español, mulato, morisco, etc.

Tara M. Plewa's "Acequia Agriculture" is a beautifully written, fact laden discussion of water, irrigation and their defining roles in Santa Fe's history. "Long established Spanish irrigation methods translated well to the dry landscape. The practice of irrigation necessitated establishing rules so that benefits were divided equitably among users. As I. G. Clark has written in his insightful book, Water in New Mexico: A History of Its Management and Use, Spaniards had centuries before learned irrigation techniques from the Romans and, later, Islamic water law from the Moors. It was the Prophet Mohammed who had taught about the law of thirst, which grants living things free access to all waters to satisfy their needs. ... These ideas, established more than one thousand years ago, form the foundations of contemporary water laws followed in the western United States today." Plewa illustrated her essay with a number of maps, pictures and charts, perhaps the most interesting two photographs of the Acequia Madre from 1890 and 2007, respectively -- the principles of Mohammed in practice many hundreds of years after his death.

The publisher offers a very generous extract from the book at sarpress.sarweb.org , focusing on the archeological studies of the city.

Two weeks ago I asked the owner of Collected Works, a great bookstore in Santa Fe for the "essential" books needed to understand Santa Fe. Her list: New Mexico: An Interpretive History by Marc Simmons; Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya; The Wind Leaves No Shadow by Ruth Laughlin; The House at Otowi Bridge: The Story of Edith Warner and Los Alamos by Peggy Pond Church; and Santa Fe, History of an Ancient City: Revised and Expanded Edition edited by David Grant Noble.

This wonderful volume is a perfect introduction of this complex, endlessly fascinating city.

Robert C. Ross 2008

Awesome Book, Expert Authors
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
The chapter edited by Tara Plewa remains one of the most enlightened discourses on the Santa Fe River that I have ever read. Plewa is a brilliant writer, with a knack for detailing this area and its history is an unparalleled manner... this one is not to be missed, and be on the lookout for anything that Plewa writes!

New Mexico
The Santero's Miracle: A Bilingual Story (Americas Award for Children's and Young Adult Literature. Commended (Awards))
Published in Hardcover by University of New Mexico Press (2004-12-15)
Author: Rudolfo Anaya
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.74
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Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

Northern New Mexico traditions and culture
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-26
The Santero's Miracle is a very sweet story that captures the culture and traditions of Northern New Mexico. The persons who carve saints (santeros) are highly regarded here. Many families have a multi-generational tradition of carving.

This story illustrates the unique culture that developed in the remote mountains of Northern New Mexico. This is a rare place in America.

The illustrations are exquisite. It doesn't matter what religious tradition the reader practices -- this is a story for everyone.

A Christmas tale about the power of miracles
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-13
Award-winning author and illustrator team Rudolfo Anaya and Amy Cordova present The Santero's Miracle: A Bilingual Story, an English/Spanish Christmas tale about the power of miracles. Don Jacobo is teaching his visiting grandson Andres how to become a santero; the two of them are working on a carving of San Isidro, the patron saint of farmers. Due to the great snowfall, Andres' parents cannot come home in time for the holiday, and don Jacobo's neighbor, don Leopoldo, is severely ill but cannot reach the hospital. Then don Jacobo dreams of a miracle: San Isidro plowing with two oxen and and an angel helping. The meaning of the dream brings about a reminder of the power of compassion, faith, and love. The bright color illustrations practically leap off the page in this joyful and uplifting story meant to be shared.

New Mexico
Savage Pilgrims: On the Road to Santa Fe
Published in Paperback by Flamingo (1997)
Author: Henry Shukman
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Used price: $57.80

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Im saving to go...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-20
I have only just finished reading this wonderful book about Henry Shukman's journeys in New Mexico.My own imagination would take over as i took in all the fascinating landscapes,people and places that the author was sharing with me.Indians and artists,shacks and glorious views from the middle of no-where...The author came across as sensitive and although at times he would feel pulled by fond memories of England,his passion for where he was there and then was so obvious.I now have a passionate dream of my own. To go and search out these places for myself and be inspired by all they have to offer..

Ever been to NM? You'll want to go back!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-24
The writings of the author left a deep impression on me. He writes with a very romantic, extremely descriptive style that allows you to feel what he saw. I lived in NM for 3 years and after reading the book was ready to go back. Mr Shukman did such a great job detailing his journey. He described many of the places I remember from there. I found myself nostalgic for the Southwest. He did such a good job, that I was ready to go back because I wanted to visit some of the places that I had never gone to when I had the opportunity. After you read the book, if you've never been to the Southwest you too will be ready to pack your bags!!!

New Mexico
The Second Son (Avalon Western)
Published in Hardcover by Avalon Books (2006-12-30)
Author: D. W. Linden
List price: $23.95
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Average review score:

A New Mexico Treasure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-01
Dan Linden has done yeoman's work in researching the history behind this wonderful novel. He has woven into his story a fantastic tapestry of early 19th century New Mexico Territory, blending Native American, Spanish and Anglo cultures. This is a must read for anyone interested in the settlement of the west, especially that of New Mexico. This is not just an exciting tale, but is a work of history that should be must reading for every high school student.

A great and stirring adventure story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-26
THE SECOND SON is the second novel by a wonderful new writer, Dan Linden. Linden's SAND CREEK was set in current day Colorado; THE SECOND SON is the first part of a saga that will cover most of the nineteenth century. THE SECOND SON is about a Spanish colonial son who is sent to live with the local Indian tribe as part of a treaty. When he becomes an adult, he's equally comfortable in both worlds, and he slips back and forth between them as he goes on a quest to find the man who he thinks has killed his brother. It's a stirring adventure, a real page-turning tale! By the way, despite what this page says, it's a real stretch to call this a Romance. This is a corking Western adventure tale!

New Mexico
Secrets of a Los Alamos Kid : 1946-1953
Published in Paperback by Alamos Historical Society (2001-12-01)
Author: Kristin Embry Litchman
List price: $12.95
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Nostalgia Trip
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-29
"Secrets" reminds me of Annie Dillard's classic "An American Childhood," though "Secrets" is written in a cozier, less formal style, reading much like a letter from a cherished friend or cousin. Both books take mundane aspects of childhood and turn them into compelling narrative. Both books describe childhood families deliciously different from your typical Ozzie and Harriet scenario. The Scary Story about wolves, forest fires and volcanoes on a family picnic especially resonated for me. What child hasn't put her own spin on things she heard, and kept the resulting terror to herself? My tummy lurched as I rode along up and down the "dippy road" to Santa Fe, and my knee screamed with fiery sympathy pains after she bailed out of the swing in response to a dare. Her chicken pox story pulled me right into the warm bosom of the close-knit Embry family, where the older kids watched out for the younger. Secrets -- not just the technical ones connected with her father, but the ones she shared with friends like Dixie around the matter of the sheets, and the secret club that didn't quite happen beneath another friend's house.

This upbeat memoir would lift my spirits and enlighten me about a child's view of a historic era and place even if I knew nothing about growing up in Los Alamos. In the interest of full disclosure, I must confess that I did grow up in Los Alamos, arriving there four years after the Embry family. We lived in another part of town and my path didn't converge with the Embrys' until high school, where her sister Pat was a classmate. Kristin has done a terrific job of telling it exactly like it was, plain and simple. From the description of the front gate and five o'clock whistle to grade school woodshop, terror of Zia, the skating rink and canyon wars, every child of the Secret City will find something to remember. She has done a magnificent job of sticking to her focus of including only stories that emphasize connection with time and place and not allowing herself to drift into deeply personal memories or topics relevant primarily to her family.

I recommend this unpretentious account of an unexplored aspect of the dawning nuclear age for readers everywhere, and look forward to a sequel about her junior and senior high school years.

Don't miss this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-06
SECRETS! is a delightful, intriguing book. The writing is crisp and snappy and very humorous and the story pulled me in from the very first page. I practically read the entire book in one sitting. We get a wonderful glimpse into the lives of a family during the years of the Cold War in the secret city of Los Alamos where atomic bombs were made and tested. Told through the viewpoint of a young girl whose father worked at the national laboratory at a time when nuclear war was a very real threat and school kids hid under their desks when the sirens went off, there are two parallel stories in this book. First, the unique experiences growing up during the 1950s and the secret games of childhood while living in a gated, locked city where everyone needed a special pass to get in or out, and second, the secret life of her father since he could never discuss the work he was doing at his job at the labs - and he always has a funny story to explain where he's been or what he's been doing whenever his family asks. An enjoyable and interesting read!

New Mexico
Seema's Show: A Life on the Left (Counterculture Series)
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (2005-09-15)
Author: Sara Halprin
List price: $9.95
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Average review score:

A Book Well Worth Reading!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-09
Seema's Show is an engaging, informative, and easy-to-read biography of a strong, complex woman whose life has so far spanned 100 years. Sara Halprin moves seamlessly back and forth as an interviewer/chronicler and a friend. Halprin artfully frames each chapter in Seema's rich life in a way that is both enlightening and entertaining. Through Halprin's keen eye, we come to learn what life was like for a female photographer and activist during the 20th century. Halprin's work as therapist lends an intimate understanding of human behavior, and her experience in film-making provides a richness and depth not seen in most biographies. If you're asking yourself, "Who's Seema Weatherwax?" then this is the book for you. Halprin won't let you down.

A Remarkable Book about a Remarkable Woman
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-18
Sara Halprin has given us a book deftly navigating between biograpy, memoir and oral history. Her subject, Seema Weatherwax, celebrated her 100th year last summer. Halprin introduces us to a woman's woman, an accomplished photographer who exhibited her photographs at her first public showing when she turned 95. While her artistry with a camera was present from an early age, it was honed while working as Ansel Adams' master printer at Yosemite. It shows in the photographs she took while visiting the dust bowl labor camps with her husband author, Jack Weatherwax and their friend Woody Guthrie in the late 30s's. Her compassion for the subjects of her photographs represent her lifelong effort to seek a more just society. And for her this was always a matter of connecting people with people -- her way of going beyond ideology, especially that of the Communist Party. For Seema, the connection between art and working for social justice is a seamless one. At 100 she continues that work and I highly recommend Halprin's book introducing us to this remarkable woman, an elder and mentor for our times.

New Mexico
Serafina's Stories
Published in Hardcover by University of New Mexico Press (2004-11-30)
Author: Rudolfo Anaya
List price: $22.95
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Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-29
I loved the stories- they crossed the cultural divide with adaptations of stories most of us heard as children.

Storytelling Magic
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-11
The Governor of Spanish New Mexico is a troubled, lonely man, caught between his Spanish subjects, the increasingly restless Pueblo peoples, the Apache marauders, and a fanatical Catholic church that is becoming ever more repressive. One day in 1680 twelve Indian prisoners are brought into town, accused of plotting against the Spanish government. Turns out, one of the "plotters" is a beautiful young woman and gifted storyteller, Serafina.

The Governor strikes an odd bargain with this Serafina. For every night that she entertains him with a story he will free one of the prisoners. Sounds like the Thousand And One Nights, but with some unusual twists. Not only are the lives of the prisoners at stake, and that of Serafina, but the future of the territory. Can the Spanish colonials and the native peoples cross their cultural divide and live in peace? Can the stories of the gifted Serafina bring them together? Or is it already too late?

Well, you simply have to read this book. Author Rudolfo Anaya writes in a beautiful, heartfelt style, sprinkling his clear, simple English with Spanish words and phrases, to create a vivid impression of the old Southwest. Loosely based on actual historical events, the story is as meaningful as ever in a time when peoples and cultures are struggling to coexist. The stories are so well done that they become more than stories. They speak to the reader personally. This book is easily read but will move you deeply. I recommend it most highly. Reviewed by Louis N. Gruber.


Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Addictions-->Substance Abuse-->Centers and Counseling Services-->United States-->New Mexico-->39
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