New Mexico Books
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Let the Mexican's live the American dreamReview Date: 2005-10-10

Used price: $25.95

Bounty Hunter's Moon by Ray HoganReview Date: 2000-04-26
Although Starbuck's brother is alegedly dead according to the opening line of this book, I hold out hope that there is a mistake about the message, and there will be another Starbuck adventure. Of course, if there is, it's probably already written as Mr. Hogan is rapidly approaching 100 years old....

Out of unselfish loveReview Date: 2008-10-12
This is a transcript of a story that was verbally passed down through the generations of the Zuni. It was recorded in 1883 by Frank Hamilton Cushing. He had become a chief Priest of the Bow society of the Macaw Clan. The story is based on a drought that happened to the Ha'wi-k'uh about 1300; before the coming of the Europeans (1539-1540).
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The basic tail is of a people that treated food like mud, and were extremely rude to their corn sprits that were in the form of two old ladies. Only two children and a discarded old woman paid them any respect. This was very bad as the Zuni is part of nature and therefore nature and strangers are to be treated with respect.
Thus the story is of the drought that sent the people away and leaving the two children and old lady behind.
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The version I read was illustrated by Lazlo Kubinyi. It is out of print so I am ordering the one illustrated by Janet Grado. Other things I found interesting is that some of the places and things we read about in this story became titles of Hillerman books.

Out of unselfish loveReview Date: 2008-05-12
This is a transcript of a story that was verbally passed down through the generations of the Zuni. It was recorded in 1883 by Frank Hamilton Cushing. He had become a chief Priest of the Bow society of the Macaw Clan. The story is based on a drought that happened to the Ha'wi-k'uh about 1300; before the coming of the Europeans (1539-1540).
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The basic tail is of a people that treated food like mud, and were extremely rude to their corn sprits that were in the form of two old ladies. Only two children and a discarded old woman paid them any respect. This was very bad as the Zuni is part of nature and therefore nature and strangers are to be treated with respect.
Thus the story is of the drought that sent the people away and leaving the two children and old lady behind.
----------------------
The version I read was illustrated by Lazlo Kubinyi. It is out of print so I am ordering the one illustrated by Janet Grado. Other things I found interesting is that some of the places and things we read about in this story became titles of Hillerman books.

I love this book.Review Date: 2007-01-11
It's probably one of my very favorite books on the Albuquerque area, and it's a breeze and a joy to read.
The book tells the story, in one man's own words, of growing up in early Albuquerque, of spending time at Ellis Ranch in the Sandia Mountains, of visiting the Tonque brick factory near San Felipe, of drinking bottled water from Coyote Springs near Carnuel, and of the Great Albuquerque Volcano Hoax.
It's illustrated with drawings by the author and (in most editions) with old photographs from the Museum of Albuquerque.
I highly recommend this book to anyone from Albuquerque or the towns of the Sandia Mountains. It's light reading, yet very informative, very well indexed, and a pleasure except for the mournful sense of loss it sometimes involuntarly causes.
Kenneth Balcomb wrote another book, which I've always meant to read, about working on an early New Mexico road near Cimarron, and (I've heard) his son is still alive and living in New Mexico. I'd like to talk with him sometime.

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International Atoms?Review Date: 2004-06-03
While most knowledgeable readers are aware that there were also efforts to develop nuclear weapons by other nations, notably in Germany, the making of the atom bomb has largely been told as an American story with the far-ranging efforts of the Manhattan Project taking center stage. But atomic science was an international endeavor and even the Manhattan Project was more of an allied effort than most have traditionally understood. As a result, Ferenc Morton's Szasz's "British Scientists and the Manhattan Project" serves as a useful corrective to many earlier accounts that have all but buried any knowledge of the British role in the project.
Beginning in December 1943 the British government sent to the remote New Mexico site of Los Alamos, where J. Robert Oppenheimer was presiding over a cadre of physicists and other scientists and technicians to design an atomic weapon, a small group that eventually numbered about 30 scientists to assist with the project. They worked long hours side-by-side with the Americans, witnessed the explosion at the Trinity site, and viewed the success with the same horror and amazement as their U.S. colleagues. Most of their names are unknown to all but a few specialists in the history of high energy physics, and the one that is not--Klaus Fuchs--is remembered only as an atomic spy for the Soviet Union. This short book does much to rescue the group from obscurity, as well as to set the record straight on Fuchs. It is an important addition to the literature of Los Alamos and the Manhattan Project.

Used price: $6.45
Collectible price: $12.00

Best New Mexico cook bookReview Date: 2005-02-11

Used price: $9.29

A riveting story blending social issues and mysteryReview Date: 2003-12-12
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American don't have to worry about terrorist crossing the border cause their way over in the middleeast over sea's nad we have navy ship that can spot something unsual swimming in the ocean.