New Mexico Books


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

New Mexico
75 Hikes in New Mexico
Published in Paperback by Mountaineers Books (1995-11)
Author: Craig Martin
List price: $12.95
New price: $5.50
Used price: $1.42
Collectible price: $12.95

Average review score:

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-22
Well worth the money you'll pay for this book

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-22
Well worth the money you'll pay for this book

Great Reference!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-25
This publication has been my "Hikers Bible" for many years now. As some of you already know, there is not much information out there on this subject. Craig Martin has created a concise, easy to read list of places to the footpaths of New Mexico. Complete with maps and photos. A book I keep in my car!

Excellent Resource for Hikers in New Mexico
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-19
This book, as the title states, lists 75 hikes that are in New Mexico. I found this book to be very useful in planning our family camping trips.

I particularly liked the fact that at the start of each hike was some information that can help me rule out or count in a hike with very little reading. For example, it will provide: distance, elevation, elevation gain, interesting points of the hike, maps that I might want to have, the difficulty, the best season to hike this trail. THe maps also are very useful.

My only comment would be that the pictures are black and white and many of them can be left out with very little loss since they don't add much to the text. (in otherwords, they are flowers, chipmunks etc.)

An excellent resource for someone who might be interested in hiking New Mexico.

New Mexico
AfterBurn: Reflections on Burning Man (Counterculture Series)
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (2005-08-29)
Author:
List price: $14.95
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Average review score:

Scholars on the Playa
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-22
I'm pleased to see that academia is now starting to look to subcultural doings as they happen, instead of invoking the fond nostalgia that the Beatniks inspired. The ability to digest and deconstruct the events that take place in this otherworldly space is much to be commended, and I think that by doing so the authors of these various articles may be tapping in to something most of their colleagues shy away from. The articles themselves are intriguing and scholarly, but never lose sight of their subject. I would love to see more editions of this book as the event (and the world around it - the context) changes and grows!

Smell the playa dust...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-31
in these pages? Read this book and you will. Tho the author comments that this book was a composite of many different burning an festivals, te undercurrent feels strangely like one which puts you there in the middle of things.

There are a few details which, if you've been there, are a little flaky, and the book gets off to kind of a slow start (ergo the 4 stars) but as you bury yourself in this read (and it's one read that, if you're at all a burner, you will end up burying yourself in) you will be amazed... engrossed... wind blown... with a lot of little surprises thrown in that you don't expect, even all the way at the end.

There is another thing, tho... if you've never been to Black Rock City, and wonder what all the hubbub is about, ad you want to know if that ticket's worth it... and what it's getting you into... this book will give you a fairly good idea. Of course, your experience is your own... but, like I said in the beginning... read this, and you can almost smell the playa dust in these pages...

A pleasure!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-13
Critical writing up to any academic standards fused with a joy in language and topic. Wonderful! It will make your mind spin with ideas, and what could be better than that!

Reflections on the Reflections of Burning Man
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-27
Prior to reading this excellent sophisticated introduction to Burning Man, I had dismissed this event as shamanism and tantra for amateurs. However, these well written, knowledgeable, and at times quite learned articles, have convinced me that Burning Man allows for the creation of authentic rituals that are rife with both transformative and aesthetic epiphanies. Moreover, it appears that Burning Man has largely not yet been" recouped" (to the use Guy Debord's term) by bourgeois capitualist society, and thereby succeeds where its predecessors, the Surrealists and Situationists, left off. Next year, instead of visiting the Himalayas or Mongolia for my taste of the (w)holy other, I will just go to Burning Man.

New Mexico
All This Way for the Short Ride: Roughstock Sonnets 1971-1996 : Poems
Published in Paperback by Museum of New Mexico Press (1996-11)
Authors: Paul Zarzyski and Barbara Van Cleve
List price: $17.50
New price: $12.91
Used price: $3.50

Average review score:

A collaboration brimming with life, love, and the passion of the strongest roughnecks
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-07
All This Way for the Short Ride: Roughstock Sonnets is a rollicking blend of poetry and action-packed, black-and-white photographs celebrating the American West, the ranch way of life, and especially rodeo culture. Written in the continued spirit of the original "Roughneck Sonnets", All This Way for the Short Ride pays especial tribute to the brave men and women who dare to ride fiercely bucking broncos for as many seconds as they can. A collaboration brimming with life, love, and the passion of the strongest roughnecks, highly recommended for western and rodeo fans. " The Night the Devil Danced on Me": A werewolf moon glares / from the top row of the bleachers, horned / owl with one eye plucked. In the black hole / of chute 8, Lonewolf waits - / an ugly bronc, mustang and rank, / the cowboys say, with notched right ear / and snaky, suck-back ways.

8-second poet . . .
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-09
This is an entertaining and moving collection of 32 poems by Montana poet Paul Zarzyski, who belongs to that rarified fraternity of rodeo cowboy poets. The intensity and focus required for riding roughstock are transferred into these highly charged poems, and most of them have the headlong intensity of a high-scoring 8-second ride.

Some of my favorite Zarzyski poems are included in this collection: "Buck," a Christmas-time lament for a dead horse; "To Wallace," a tribute to rancher-poet Wallace McRae; "Partner," about the fierce and loving bond between two rodeo friends, dedicated to Montana writer, Kim Zupan; "Monte Carlo Express - Box 258, 15.3 Miles Home," about reading mail while driving a speeding car; and the high-spirited "Escorting Granny to the Potluck Rocky Mountain Oyster Feed at Bowman's Corner." The best, of course, is the title poem, "All This Way for the Short Ride," about the death of another rider.

There's an appreciative foreword by Wyoming-born western writer, Teresa Jordan, and 27 wonderful black-and-white rodeo photographs by Montana photographer Barbara Van Cleve, taken between the years 1971-1996. An excellent addition to any bookshelf of Western literature.

To find that part of each of us that wanted to be a cowboy
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-25
I took my wife on a whirlwind vacation of Montana in 1996. One of our stops was the annual Cowboy Poetry Reading in Lewistown. Paul was there to recite "Rosined-Up-'n'-Itchin'-to-Git" and "Monte Carlo Express-Box 258, 15.3 Miles Home." Afterwards I had the great pleasure of meeting him and shaking his hand. I was so impressed by his ability to describe his feelings for the West and for his own personal experiences that I wanted to read more, and was able to find copies of his Roughstock Sonnets and I Am Not A Cowboy. Everything about this man tells you what it's like to live life to the fullest, from the bare-back of a bucking horse. Thank God there are still cowboys among us.

Zarzyski's poems are a journey through the cowboy soul.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-18
Zarzyski is the perfect guide to take us on a journey through the cowboy life - his heart and his soul. But these poems aren't just for cowfolk, horsefolk, and rodeo lovers. "All This Way..." contains some of the most poignant, soul-touching lyrics. The poems seem rough, but once the reader catches the rhythm, it's a beautiful ride! Van Cleve's photos, honest and real, set Zarzyski's works off perfectly. If you are a horse/cow person or just a lover of fine poetry, please experience "All This Way for the Short Ride"! You will be greatly rewarded.

New Mexico
The Architecture of Bart Prince: A Pragmatics of Place
Published in Hardcover by W. W. Norton & Company (1999-05-01)
Author: Christopher Curtis Mead
List price: $60.00
New price: $47.60
Used price: $45.36

Average review score:

escaping categories in BPrince's ardhitecture
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-16
Since I personlly know both author/wife and architect I can look back over 12 or 13 years and say, uniquivocally, that Dr Mead and his wife/photographer have not only escaped the dreaded, and all too common categorization and sycophantic drooling that characterises most architectural books, articals, essays, reviews ... just pick a category and some adjectives for yourself. THIS IS GOOD, SOUND WORK -- as an architect who benefited from both their perspectives, and as a frequent editor -- THIS IS GOOD, SOUND WORK. Top drawer.

Eye Candy!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-25
If your a fan of Frank Lloyd Wright, Greene and Greene or Kendrick Kellogg, then you will find this book quiet fascinating.
Prince seems to take his work a step further than most architects offering a touch of fantasy to his architecture. The book has lots of glossy photos, floor plans and information on Prince's life and work.

Mead's writing/subject is enlightening, learned, enjoyable
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-12
A book as interesting as the funky forms it analizes. I have had the honour of both reading this book and attending Professor Mead's architecture retrospective class series. The book is filled with an incledibly informed, and informative text which is supported with excellent photos and diagrams. I highly reccomend this book for students of architecture, or just for an interesting read, and if you find yourself in the area of the University Of New Mexico, I highly suggest you do yourself the favour of sitting in on one of Professor Mead's lectures

Yes, Yes and Yes. Prince is just that.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-29
If Frank Lloyd Wright is King, than indeed Bart Prince is Prince. The photographs in the book are brilliant and Christopher Mead's Commentary is awesome and highly informative as well. Showing a lot into Bart Prince the man himself. I hope one day to own a Bart Prince Home.

New Mexico
The Arizona Breeding Bird Atlas
Published in Hardcover by University of New Mexico Press (2005-09-01)
Author:
List price: $60.00
New price: $45.00
Used price: $37.95

Average review score:

Arizona Breeding Bird Atlas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-04
At last, the definitive guide to breeding birds in Arizona. Well written with beautiful photographs. A must have reference for the serious Arizona birder and avian ecologist.

If you're into birds buy this book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-03
Excellent book, love it so far. Lots of great info as well as nesting locations and life histories for all the nesting birds in Az. As a student of wildlife biology/ornithology this book has already come in handy a few times. The only thing I would change is maybe better pics, or diagrams to help in identification. Overall though, I would definately suggest this book to anyone interested in ornithology. BUY IT!

The New Authority on Arizona's Birds
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-06
If you don't have it, GET IT! The new authority on Arizona's breeding birds has rode into town!

Stunning
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-19
Arizona has been a dream destination for birders and ornithologists for a century and a quarter. Since the publication of the first Lane guide more than 30 years ago, traveling birders have benefited from the availability of a number of "birding Baedekers" for finding the state's many specialties. But what of birders who want to go beyond simply listing the Arizona rarities? With Phillips et al.'s excellent monograph on the distribution and status of Arizona's birds more than forty years old, and the most recent annotated checklist pushing 25, local birders and visitors alike have often found it difficult to place their sightings in context.
Now come Corman and Wise-Gervais, and their corps of well over 250 volunteer 'atlasers', with the first major reference work on the state's birds to appear for a long generation. Well designed and richly illustrated, the new Arizona Breeding Bird Atlas (or, to use the faintly discoish acronym, ABBA) fully deserves the place of honor it will occupy on birders' bookshelves, next to the magnum opus of Phillips, Marshall, and Monson.
Field work for the ABBA was begun in 1993 and completed at the turn of this century. Given the size of the state and the low number of observers available in all but the most densely populated areas, a system of "priority" blocks was developed for the surveys; the difficulties and the sampling methodologies developed to overcome them are clearly described in the book's introductory matter, as are the criteria and definitions used to document each species' breeding status.
While the book covers only those species known or suspected to have bred in Arizona, the splendid maps and well-illustrated habitat descriptions will be tremendously useful even to birders who visit the state only during non-breeding season (a nearly meaningless concept for species such as Lesser Goldfinch, which nests nearly year-round in the desert lowlands).
The results are published in a series of clearly structured species accounts, each occupying a full opening and each with a photograph of the species and a dramatically large, easily interpreted map showing the locations of breeding records. The species portraits are strictly speaking not necessary, but with only a few slight clunkers in the lot, they do add considerably to the visual appeal of these pages. For many species, convenient graphs showing habitat distribution and breeding phenology are also provided.
Although contributed by 19 different authors, the prose accounts show a uniformity of style that is greatly to the credit of the editors; only in the short anecdotal paragraphs beginning each account does the voice of the individual author intrude, sometimes charmingly, often less so. The 'meat' of the accounts is rigorously structured, with a detailed description of the species' habitat preferences followed by a clear summary of each bird's breeding biology in Arizona, including full and often carefully analyzed information on timing, nest construction, and behavior; this is simply great stuff, and it is high praise to say that over the last weeks I have found myself consulting ABBA in such matters as often as the online version of Birds of North America.
The accounts conclude with a discussion of the map data; many of the most interesting comments here are those directed at the apparent absence of certain species (the mysterious Lewis's Woodpecker, for example) in areas where they might be expected to breed. Careful readers will note many opportunities for research into new topics.
Among the appendices is a nearly 20-page bibliography, an extremely welcome addition to the resources available on Arizona ornithology.

New Mexico
Best Hikes With Children in New Mexico (Best Hikes With Children)
Published in Paperback by Mountaineers Books (2004-02)
Author: Bob Julyan
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.04
Used price: $7.50

Average review score:

Great Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-05
This is a great resource. It is very accurate when it rates difficulty and terrain of a hike. We have found it to be right on target. It also points out some interesting sites you might see on the hike, such as large pieces of obsidian, interesting plants, etc.

Great book very useful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
I was recommended this book about 9 years ago...it is one of our most used reference books. The hikes described are quite accurate, with good driving directions. There are plenty of hikes listed throughout the state. I often give a copy of this book to families new to the area and they find it an invaluable resource, too. If you want to get out and about the Land of enchanment and turn your kids on, too...this is the book for you!

If you like to hike and you have kids you need this book.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-17
This is a great book that really makes my camping trips. I have children and with this we are able to find the hikes that we can do with them so that everyone has a great time, a must for the New Mexico Hiker with kids.

Very Informative!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-13
My family loves this reference tool! We plan trips for our 5 children using this book as a guide. Even our baby can be included because the book rates the difficulty and distance of the various sites. We wouldn't hike without it!

New Mexico
Birds of New Mexico Field Guide
Published in Paperback by Adventure Publications (2003-04-01)
Author: Stan Tekiela
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.05
Used price: $10.19

Average review score:

Great Bird book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-24
Best collection of birds in our area that I've read. I highly recommend it to anyone living in New Mexico.

Best tourist/casual bird book ever.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-31
I'm a "photographer who happens to think birds are neat", not a "real" birder; I picked this up on a vacation to Albuquerque, and it was great for figuring out what all of these unfamiliar-but-probably-common brightly colored birds are. I don't want to become an ecosystem-expert on the southwest -- but "hey, that's a cool looking red-and-orange bird *click* *click* ok, now what was it? *flip to `birds that have prominent yellow'* *flip through a handful of pictures* Oh look, Western Tanager, I'd never even heard of those before..." If that's you too, this is the book you want. (Of course, you can also show your snapshots on-camera to the nature center volunteers, they're nice that way... but other tourists won't know either :-)

It's not Sibley's. It compares favorably with the Smithsonian Handbooks for good at-a-glance presentation of useful information, though, and it's small enough to actually bring with you.

A very useful general guide
Helpful Votes: 26 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-29
This isn't a guide for the serious birdwatcher: it covers the 140 most common birds of New Mexico, not every bird that you'll ever see in the state, and the descriptions of the species vary considerably in depth. Also, although the photos are generally very good, some don't show the significant details that help you to recognize a particular species: the photo of the scaled quail, for example, doesn't convey the bird's distinctive "cotton-top" look, and often the head is the only part you can see as it scuttles away through the brush.

On the other hand, this is an easy-to-use, convenient guide for the casual birdwatcher or the curious tourist. Birds are listed by color, and, in species where the sexes are different colors, both males and females are shown. The maps of the bird's distribution in the state are helpful too, as the regional maps in other popular field guides don't show this level of detail. This isn't the guide I'll take with me on my annual birding pilgrimage to the Bosque del Apache, but I'll keep it in my car and lend it to my guests from out of state.

Birds of New Mexico: Field Guide
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-16
This book is in beautiful condition and is one I had been searaching for! Very concise and easy to use.

New Mexico
Blind Switch
Published in Paperback by Poisoned Pen Press (2006-03-31)
Author: John McEvoy
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.15
Used price: $3.98

Average review score:

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Races
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-13
Blind Switch is worth the read! A lively book with full blown interesting, and some despicable characters, this book kept me going. McEvoy makes the world of horse breeding and racing a seductive one and one I would like to visit again. He blends the good guys with the bad guys as the story weaves from Chicago to Kentucky and en route we watch the main character grow and ultimately flourish.
A fast and refreshing story!

A must read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-28
Blind Switch is a great ride - lots of unusual and goofy characters - some are people you'd like to know, including Jack Doyle, the main character. He starts out in a "blind switch", essentially boxed in by life, though in part by his own doing. He evolves and revolves through the world of thoroughbred horse racing. You will too. Great suspense, life lessons, and peripheral romance. You'll hate the bad guys and enjoy the good guys, with lots of laughs. The Chicago references are fun for us Chicagoans. Ever wonder why horse racing is actually a clean sport? Because the FBI, the mob, and the industry itself need and want it to be. It's a great read! I didn't want it to end. I'm waiting for McEvoy's next move.

Fans of the late Dick Francis will thoroughly enjoy
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-28
When Jack Doyle is downsized from his corporate Chicago job, a friend tells him he can make an easy $25,000 on a horse race. He accepts the job and the fix is totally successful but the FBI has an idea what he did even though they have no evidence to convict. The agents "convince" him to gather evidence that rich and powerful Harvey Rexroth is having his horses killed for the insurance money. One of Rexroth's employees, manager Aldous Bolger reports his suspicions to the FBI

Bolger agrees to help Jack get hired by Rexroth and Doyle but finds he likes and respects the man who loves the horses as if they were his own. The FBI believes the leader of the horse killing ring is former jockey Ronald Montvedt, a stone cold killer who will do anything for money. When Bolger catches him trying to kill a stallion, the ex-jockey maims Bolger. Doyle is now determined to take Montvedt and Rexroth down, no matter what methods he has to use.

Fans of books of the late Dick Francis will thoroughly enjoy BLIND SWITCH, a novel about horses and people who care for them. The protagonist undergoes a metamorphosis as he stays in contact with the beautiful animals and goes from being a shady character to a person who wants to see justice done. John McEvoy has a unique voice that will win him a place with many fans and BLIND SWITCH deserves to win an award for best new talent.

Harriet Klausner

Saddle Up and Hold On - It's a Fun Ride!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-13
I love books that deal with horses. I especially look forward to those which deal with horse racing. Add to that setting a hero with some serious defects in his character, an interesting scenario which puts him on the side of the angels, several villians whom you will love to hate, some people you will genuinely care about and a generous sprinkling of serious nut cases and you have a very readable, thoroughly enjoyable first novel by John McEvoy. I have read most of the writings of the late, great Dick Francis and in my judgment, references to his writings in comparison to this story is comparing apples to oranges. Both authors have an interesting way of telling their story, but there is little comparison to how they go about it. This is a story that will hold your interest, tickle your funny bone and satisfy your sense of justice. That's a trifecta worth betting on!!

New Mexico
Blood & Treasure: Confederate Empire in the Southwest (Texas a & M University Military History Series)
Published in Hardcover by Texas a & M Univ Pr (1995-05)
Author: Donald S. Frazier
List price: $29.95
New price: $8.49
Used price: $8.10

Average review score:

Southern Reach for Empire
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
An excellent account of the Southern attempt to sieze and hold the western territories. I enjoyed the book and found it easy to read. It covered the southern viewpoint and history of the attempt to secure Arizonia and New Mexico for the Confederacy. The book has good maps that allow the reader to understand the movement across the wide expanse of the Southwest. Personal accounts give a good view of the individaul Texan's view of the campaign and battles. A forgotten theater which was overshadowed by the fighting elsewhere. Dr. Frazier does a good job of showing the strengths and weaknesses of the Confederate Army of New Mexico. The book added to my understanding of this campaign and I recommend to to anyone interested in this campaign.

Great Book--A Must Read--This is for all Civil War Buffs
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-02
This book is a must for Yankee Historian

Tremendous book,Eyeopening to the Southern view of the Civil
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-01
Fantastic book about the southern struggle to build an empire!All northern history teachers should read this book.I am a U.S.History teacher who wrote a story about my greatgrandfather who was in prison in Texas during the Civil War and DFrazier contacted me for info,thus I have now read his book and it is superb!

Excellent book on a lesser known aspect of the War.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-09
I found this book to be an exciting and revealing look into the western campaign of the Civial War. Dr. Frazier is an incredible story teller as well as a thorough researcher. A must read for anyone interested in the role of the western Confederacy.

New Mexico
Blue Mesa Review #7 (Blue Mesa Review)
Published in Paperback by Creative Writing Center, University of New Mexico Department of English (1995-12-31)
Author:
List price: $10.00
New price: $10.00
Used price: $3.50

Average review score:

Blue Mesa is a cross-cultural delight.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-15
This anthology rules the roost when it comes to good writing from the west. There's a freedom of expression and a willingness to push the envelop here that I have not found with other reviews on the university level. Kudos.

Outstanding.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-01
Bukowski's ghost is probably putting in overtime reading selections from Blue Mesa.

Blue Mesa Review rocks!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-27
What I enjoyed about this particular issue was the willingness of the writers to explore the boundaries between countries and how that influences not only our relationships but the way we tend to look at the world. When a narrator writes about cities separating him from his friend, he is writing about more than geographical distance. Kudos to the editors of Blue Mesa!

Superb collection of poetry and fiction!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-08
BLUE MESA REVIEW #6 doesn't pull any punches. It begins with a great dramatic monologue dedicated to the memory of Cesar Chavez. This is a special issue because it is a tribute to Rudolfo Anaya, the man responsible for the existence of the magazine. He has helped assemble a marvelous collection of poetry and prose from writers more interested in The Other than the Self. These selfless writers challenge the status quo with emotional fireworks. I would say this issue is probably the finest collection of voices to come out of the west in quite a while.


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