New Mexico Books


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

New Mexico
Five families;: Mexican case studies in the culture of poverty
Published in Unknown Binding by New American Library (1954)
Author: Oscar Lewis
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Average review score:

Excellent account of differences in Poverty
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-08
I just read this book, as I have read his other works. Oscar Lewis gives an extensive complete examination into the lives of extreme poverty. He gives exacting detail of the homes, lifestyles, and characteristics of the poor in Mexico. The last chapter delves with the poor who have accomplished "some wealth" and their upbringing still manages to evolve the same as if they were still poor. Wonderful thorough book!

I have reread this book 3 times
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-24
I first read Five Families when I was a 23yo public health nurse from the Midwest, working in a Mexican-American barrio in East Los Angeles. A co-worker advised me to read this book in order to better understand the families I found myself working with.
I devoured it.
Then I came to realize that it's a seminal work in modern cultural anthropology, a book that will surely stand the test of time, a 'study' written in a style that makes it accessible to all readers.
Five Families is a dramatic and forceful account five poor Mexican families. It's a book that will leave you changed.

IT'S A FAMILY AFFAIR...
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-17
I first read this book many years ago, along with some of the author's other works, and decided to take read it again. Time certainly has not diminished the power of the author, winner of the 1967 National Book Award for his book, "La Vida", to take the reader into the lives of others. This is an anthropological work that reads as if it were a riveting novel, so fascinating is its subject matter.

The author takes the reader into the lives of five different Mexican families for one entire day, so that the reader can see how it is that they live their lives. The families are both rural and urban and represent a cross-section of Mexico at the time that this book was written. All but one of the families portrayed are poor, yet they all share some similar characteristics.

Written during the nineteen fifties, this book is, for the most part, a look at a culture of poverty. It is also a look at a culture that is in transition, shifting from rural to urban with its often resulting poverty and pathology. Yet, it is also a culture into which, North American material comforts and influence were making inroads. That then nascent influence is often reflected in even the poorest of the families laid bare here.

The author basically gives the reader a typical day in the lives of each of these families. It is an intimate, objective look that creates a fascinating family portrait. It is a totally engrossing work of not only anthropological import but of historical value, as well. The author has managed to freeze in time a segment of Mexican life during the nineteen fifties. Who would have thought that reading about people shopping, preparing meals, and talking about their relationships would prove to be so fascinating?

Those who are interested in other cultures, as well as the way people live their lives, will really enjoy this book. The author provides a fascinating, freeze-frame glimpse into the lives of others. I simply loved this book. Bravo!


New Mexico
Flash Flood
Published in Hardcover by Poisoned Pen Press (2002-12-15)
Author: Susan Slater
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Average review score:

Who Shot BR?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-28
Every once in a while you encounter a murder novel in which all the characters are so interesting, you hate seeing anyone get killed. This is one of them.

The main character is a Dan Mahoney, an insurance investigator and a man you'd like to know. In some ways, he has the 'solid' feel of characters in John Lutz's novels.

He's also unflappable. In one of the best scenes, good ol' boy ranch hands set Dan up with an ornery horse, and I loved how he handled the situation.

The unwinding of the story is more cinematic rather than whodunit. It has a little bit of tasty sex and a lot of characterization.

strong police procedural
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-20
Bill Roland Eklund, the owner of the Double Horseshoe Ranch in Tatum, New Mexico lost three heads of cattle over a three-month period. He has filed claims worth over $600,000 with United Life and Casualty but before they remit such a huge some of money, they want to make sure there is no fraud involved so they dispatch Dan Mahoney to find out what is going on at the reach.

Before he reaches the ranch, Dan witnesses a double homicide. When one of the victims, Eric Linden turns up alive, he contacts Dan to tell him that he took the fall for Billy a drug charge and expected two million dollars waiting for him when he got out of prison. Now Eric wants revenge and he intends to find the evidence to give to Dan that will send his former employer to jail for life. Dan has a lot of problems with this scenario including the fact that he likes Billy and is in love with Eric's wife who is divorcing him.

The hero doesn't realize why he is out in the field after years behind a desk, but that doesn't stop him from solving the case in a very unique manner, helping the FBI find the real drug dealer and falling for his sister's best friend. Though relationships make solving the case harder on Dan's conscience, the story line is exciting and action packed. Susan Slater's new series is compelling and will lead the audience to want to read the next installment as soon as possible.

Harriet Klausner

exciting and action packed crime thriller
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-18
Bill Roland Eklund, the owner of the Double Horseshoe Ranch in Tatum, New Mexico lost three heads of cattle over a three-month period. He has filed claims worth over $600,000 with United Life and Casualty but before they remit such a huge some of money, they want to make sure there is no fraud involved so they dispatch Dan Mahoney to find out what is going on at the reach.

Before he reaches the ranch, Dan witnesses a double homicide. When one of the victims, Eric Linden turns up alive, he contacts Dan to tell him that he took the fall for Billy a drug charge and expected two million dollars waiting for him when he got out of prison. Now Eric wants revenge and he intends to find the evidence to give to Dan that will send his former employer to jail for life. Dan has a lot of problems with this scenario including the fact that he likes Billy and is in love with Eric's wife who is divorcing him.

The hero doesn't realize why he is out in the field after years behind a desk, but that doesn't stop him from solving the case in a very unique manner, helping the FBI find the real drug dealer and falling for his sister's best friend. Though relationships make solving the case harder on Dan's conscience, the story line is exciting and action packed. Susan Slater's new series is compelling and will lead the audience to want to read the next installment as soon as possible.

Harriet Klausner

New Mexico
Forge of Progress, Crucible of Revolt: Origins of the Mexican Revolution in LA Comarca Lagunera, 1880-1911
Published in Hardcover by Univ of New Mexico Pr (1994-10)
Author: William K. Meyers
List price: $19.95
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Average review score:

One of the best writings about La Laguna
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-12
As a native Lagunero (Torreon, Coah) this is one of the best books I've read about the Comarca. It is a must to understand where do we come from.

Study as History demands, an insite to the Laguna.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-08
The Laguna Region has been mis-understood by many; not so a fellow from Australia and this William K. Meyers and some others, including Reed. How strange, that it will take "strangers" to document this part of Old Mexico, and then, so sweet... the Laguna was made by foreign peoples, not only of other States; Zacatecas would probably announce a good part of the population!

The Iritilas lost, of iniquilation due to sickness, and no monument to them: But the "river people" are richly disclosed by Meyers and adds a scholarship bibliography to the history of The Laguna.

If you have ever wondered how it is that the many peoples that inhabit this Region are so jelous of one another, this book could enlighten you. And, if ever you drank a drop of Lagunero water, not only will you recognize the value of IT in a desert, but she (the Laguna) will demand you to return it!

I, a Lagunero, am intriged by the many writtings that this book of Meyers uncovers, and finally come to rest on the "why's" and "porque's".

scholarly but straightforward, insightful, often brilliant
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1996-12-19
This scholarly discussion of the origins of the Mexican Revolution in the Laguna region of northern Mexico not only makes plain the complex strands of human interaction that ignited the Mexican conflict but goes far to explain how revolutions arise and dissolve generally. Meyers's style is direct and careful. And he really knows and loves Mexico. (By the way, that LA should be La.

New Mexico
Fourteen Families in Pueblo Pottery
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (1994-08-01)
Author: Rick Dillingham
List price: $17.95
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Average review score:

Another art gem
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-14
For anyone interested in Native American pottery, this volume is a must-have.

We are lucky enough to have met Florence Chavarria Browning of the Santa Clara pueblo, and to have purchased one of her spectacular black pots.

These particular pots are not glazed, but fired specially to create the pure, colt black of black onyx, darker than coal, and softly glowing. Very few artists have skill enough to burn these amazing pots, and this book, introduces readers to the best of them.

14 families of pueblo pottery
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-11
almost every piece of pottery I have is represented in the book!

Outstanding Update to an Old Classic
Helpful Votes: 36 out of 38 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-27
This is a wonderful detailed book of the the finest potters to be found in the southwest. This new expanded edition provides great family trees of the finest of Pueblo potters. If you're planning a visit to the Southwest and hope to meet some of these potters, it is the perfect companion book to The Native American Indian Artist Directory that will actually provide phone numbers and mailing addresses for many of the potters found in this outstanding edition.

New Mexico
Frida Kahlo
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (1995-11-01)
Author: Malka Drucker
List price: $14.95
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Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $15.89

Average review score:

A comprehensive volume of Frida Kahlo's work and life
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
I've been a fan of Frida Kahlo since high school, and as an artist, I've been on a quest to find a book that includes all of her paintings and portrays their colors and contrast accurately. Many books increase the contrast so much that you can no longer see definition in the dark areas of her painting, but not this one! Likewise, many books only show a few of her more popular paintings, but this large volume dug many up from obscurity and presents them in vivid, full-page detail.

If you would like to own one book that covers all of Frida's works, this is it--look no further! This has a poetically written account of the political and social conditions she grew up and flourished in, as well as details of her paintings that are amazing.

An In-Depth Account of Kahlo's Private Life
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-28
Tired of reading all the Kahlo biographies full of facts in a "documentary style" format..? Then this book is for you. This Kahlo biography, with a splash of Mexican history, presents an in-depth look at the private life of this famous Mexican painter in the style of a novel. This book is written for young adult readers and is very well written, well organized, easy reading and full of tidbits of information not found in other books. Once you start to read it you can't put it down. When you're finished you will know and understand the real Frida Kahlo. Highly recommend this book to readers of all ages.

If you are looking for information on her paintings you won't find it here. Not much is said about her paintings and there are only 6 small color and 3 black & white illustrations of her paintings and 6 black & white photos. In the back of the book there is a very brief chronology.

Beautiful!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-03
This book is amazing. If you're a fan of Frida Kahlo, don't hesitate to check it out. For one thing, the book itself is well crafted. Along with the gorgeous prints (and various fold outs to show details), there's a good amount of photographs and a well-written biography.

Another great book on Kahlo is "Frida Kahlo: The Painter And Her Work" by Helga Prignitz-Poda. It has a slipcase so perhaps it'll appear to be "better," but Lozano's book is less than half the price, a bit larger and contains just as much, if not more.

I'd imagine poring over this book is as close as one can get to viewing her work in person without actually being there.

New Mexico
Gatekeeper to Los Alamos: Dorothy Scarritt McKibbin
Published in Paperback by Los Alamos Historical Society Publications (2003-04)
Author: Nancy Cook Steeper
List price: $15.00
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Used price: $11.24
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

Power Girl Ignites My Spirit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-24
What a mesmorizing account of a woman's life! I could not put the book down and found that Dorothy McKibbin's image of being a "power girl" ignited my own need to move forward and make a difference in life. Steeper has done an incredibly thorough job capturing the details of not only McKibbin's life and life-long contributions, but also the events of the time period. I highly recommend this book and plan to buy more for my "power girl" girlfriends around the world!

Power Girl Ignites Spirit
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-24
What a mesmorizing account of a woman's life! I could not put the book down and found that Dorothy McKibbin's image of being a "power girl" ignited my own need to blast forward and make a difference in life. Steeper has done an incredibly thorough job capturing the details of not only McKibbin's life and life-long contributions, but also the events of the time period. I highly recommend this book and plan to buy more for my "power girl" girlfriends around the world!

The View from 109 East Palace Avenue
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-05
Undoubtedly there were thousands of unique perspectives to World War II, but one of the most interesting views was had by a lone woman who sat behind a desk in a small office in the ancient adobe hacienda at 109 East Palace Avenue in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Her name was Dorothy McKibbin. During the Manhattan Project, Robert Oppenheimer and his gathering of scientists at Los Alamos designed and produced the first atomic bomb. McKibbin took care of just about everything else. A Smith College grad, Dorothy McKibbin had seen some difficult times in her early life, despite coming from a well-to-do Kansas City family. She spent a year as a "lunger" in a sanitarium in the mid 1920s, and she was widowed with a10-month-old son at the age of 33. But McKibbin was a survivor, a woman of determination. She picked up her young child, pulled up roots, and started over in the small, off-the-beaten-path town that had captivated her as she recovered from tuberculosis in 1925-Santa Fe. The move placed her at a crossroads with history, where in 1942 she would become the Gatekeeper to Los Alamos. She arrived in Santa Fe in 1932 with no job nor any prospects of one, but soon she had a bookkeeper's position at a trading company and was building a stunning adobe home that is now one of Santa Fe's historic properties. She made friends with the "cultural mix" of the Santa Fe area, among them photographer Laura Gilpin, architects John Gaw Meem and Katherine Stinson Otero, poets Witter Bynner and Peggy Pond Church, artist Cady Wells, and such legendary locals as Edith Warner and Tilano Montoya. Life was unhurried and unaffected. Then, in 1942, she met Robert Oppenheimer and that all changed. She was offered a new job at that meeting and took it immediately, saying years later, "I never met a person with a magnetism that hit you so fast and so completely as his did." It was an overwhelming job, but, through it, she and Oppenheimer formed an extraordinary friendship. A strong bond developed between them that lasted throughout their lives. In his history of the Manhattan Project, David Hawkins said it best. "Dorothy loved Robert Oppenheimer. He was her special one, and she, his." Pricilla McMillan of Harvard University has summed up this book well in saying, "this is the story of the beautiful, high-spirited woman who helped Robert Oppenheimer create the Los Alamos Laboratory and became its link to the outside world during World War Two. . . . It is exciting to read and just really excellent in every way."

New Mexico
Girl on a Pony (Western Frontier Library)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (1994-04)
Author: Laverne Hanners
List price: $22.95
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Average review score:

Laverne was my Aunt
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-11
I knew many of the people Laverne talked about in this book. In my teen years, I spent a few weeks staying with my uncle Jiggs Collins. Jiggs lived in Trinidad when I first stayed at his house. He had a wild baby bobcat residing in his living room that winter.

Jiggs introduced me to the songs of Ramblin Jack Elliot. Jiggs was a LADIES man. Lots of ladies loved the old guy. He was one of the nicest and most considerate men I ever met, except that he could not manage to keep appointments. Jiggs's brother Bob said that Jiggs "woke up in a new world every morning." I asked Laverne why she loved Jiggs. She said he was handsome and was a gentle lover. He was not gentle when he killed a bear or rode a horse.

Jiggs moved to Weston and built a stone house at age 60+. He built it from scratch, working the stone then setting it. I miss him.

I agree, this story would make a great movie.

A powerful woman's jewel
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-14
You wouldn't guess at the power of this book from it's size. As finely written as the complicated, intricately tatted lace fancywork Laverne's mother tatted into bleached sugar sacks, "still whole after fifty years." Stories as gripping and gritty as anything Hemingway ever wrote, featuring hailstorms that break every window in the house, treacherous horses, dogs, and rattlesnakes, and scandalous cowboys. Frequent flashes of wise, deep humor, understated and droll, that catches you unawares and leaves you laughing out loud. This was a woman worthy of the name. Would make a terrific movie.

Funny and honest life of a girl growing up in the desert
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-12
I wish you could all have met Dr. Hanners! Janet Reno wrote to Dr. Hanners praising her mutual memory of growing up wild and free while trying to control nature and nature in the form of a pony. These are real people, many of whom still live in Kenton, Oklahoma, population 52.

New Mexico
Grandmother's adobe dollhouse
Published in Hardcover by New Mexico Magazine (1984)
Authors: MaryLou M Smith and MaryLou M. Smith
List price: $15.00
Used price: $1.88
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

The hardback is preferable
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-28
Having lost an older copy of this wonderfully illustrated book, I ordered the paperback, only to be disapointed by the xerox quality of the drawings. This book deserves the hardbound format because the artwork is exceptionally authentic. The poorly copied paperback is not worthy.

Everything you need to know about adobe construction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-15
This little book, intended for children, shows readers of all ages how an abobe home is built, and what all the components are, including a glossary as you go along. Great little book. All children interested in world cultures should read this book.

Beautiful book about SW architecture and culture for any age
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-23
An educational book for adults and children about the architectural aspects of Adobe construction and SW culture with correct names, pronunciations and explainations of terms such as latillas, santos, luminairas and nichos. It is a description of a real adobe dollhouse in New Mexico. It is a great educational experience.

New Mexico
The Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals (Grandmother Stories, V. 1)
Published in Hardcover by University of New Mexico Press (2002-08-26)
Author: Deborah L. Duvall
List price: $14.95
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Collectible price: $24.50

Average review score:

The Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-15
I enjoyed reading this book and I found the artwork to be most interesting. This book explains two of our strangest creatures, the flying squirrel and the bat, who can fly although they are not birds. The excitement builds up as the birds find a way to make wings for the little animals, no bigger than mice, to prepare for the ball game. The action of the game itself is quick and intense, as the animals and birds battle it out. Can you guess who wins? You'll find yourself cheering for Bat as he dips and dives for the ball, but watch out! Bluejay drops the ball just at the crucial moment. I give this one an A+ for enjoyment.

The Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-15
I am happy to find a book that describes the game of stickball the way it was originally played here in the southeast. We Cherokees called the game "the little brother of war" in the old days. Even now our villages near the Cherokee Reservation in North Carolina play against each other in the traditional was, by setting up goal posts at both ends of the ball field. You will hear the teams taunting each other just as described in this book. Thanks to the writer and the artist for helping to keep our culture alive.

The Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-15
What more could you ask from a picture book? The Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals is a wonderful tale that explains how the bat and the flying squirrel came to be. Duvall's version of this story sticks closely to the original Cherokee legend with expanded imagery and character development. Like all great stories, this one teaches a lesson for human beings. Jacob's beautifully detailed drawings will hold the imagination spellbound as the story unfolds in crisp black and white. This book won the 2003 Oklahoma Book Award for Design and Illustration. I am proud to own a signed first edition that I obtained while visiting Tahlequah, Oklahoma during the Cherokee National Holiday. I highly recommend this book to art collectors and readers alike.

New Mexico
Hallelujah City
Published in Hardcover by University of New Mexico Press (2007-09-16)
Author: Tom LaMarr
List price: $24.95
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Used price: $7.65
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Hallelujah City by Tom LaMarr
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
Excellent book! Great new writer that knows how to write uniquely and with a different style! A real page turner!

wildly creative
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-20
This is a wildly creative and deeply thoughtful book. Great characters and inventive situations. It is a fun read and a book both myself and my wife enjoyed tremendously. Can't wait for his next book. We loved his first book also.

Joseph Heller got it right...Tom Lamarr is a great writer!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-12
Joseph Heller (Catch 22) praised Lamarr's first novel, October Revolution, calling it a "lighthearted, dandy satire" containing a "variety of deft pops at many deserving targets." Lamarr doesn't play it safe with his bold second book, Hallelujah City. This is a daring blend of Cantebury Tales and On the road that explores the complexity of a father-daughter relationship as well as the seductive allure of religious fanatacism. It's all presented within the context of a classic road trip that ends with an explosive confrontation at a doomsday commune.


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