Southwest Books
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Used price: $14.85
Collectible price: $125.00

Being the wife of a cowboy...Review Date: 2000-10-14
Suitable for any cowboy enthusiastReview Date: 2003-11-09
A real glimpse of the west when it was wild.Review Date: 1998-10-01

Used price: $198.25
Collectible price: $150.00

Cowpuncher by Kurt MarkusReview Date: 2001-03-03
Cowpuncher - A Book of Real Life, Real CowboysReview Date: 2001-02-13
COWPUNCHERReview Date: 2001-03-27


"Brilliantly constructed and extremely facinating.Review Date: 1999-08-10
A crucial view of Vigil's genius and his writing of region.Review Date: 1999-07-08
"Brilliantly constructed and extremely facinating.Review Date: 1999-08-10

romantic to the coreReview Date: 2002-01-05
A Connecticut Yankee in ArizonaReview Date: 2003-06-08
Krutch writes of birds, the night sky, bats, saguaro cactus, ocotillo, and desert flowers. Considering them, he rediscovers the truth in ideas he has so long held as true that they've become near platitudes. Where there is plentitude in some things, for instance, there is no need for it in others. Nature cares for the species but not individuals, while human values tend toward the opposite. While every rose has its thorn, the blooming cactus shows us that the reverse is also true. A visit to the vastness and forbidding desert monuments of Cathedral Valley in south central Utah reminds him of the precariousness of human life.
The desert leads Krutch to contemplation of its paradoxes, as well. For instance, the struggle for life here where conditions for survival are more restrictive actually create an uncrowded and more serene ecosystem by comparison with the tropics. The varieties of bird life are vastly greater here than in more temperate climates. A species of toads can live unseen and unheard for 363 days of the year, emerging after a rain fall to sing and reproduce, then disappear and survive somehow in the waterless months between. Finally, there's one question he's never able to answer: why bats fly clockwise from Carlsbad cave.
You can't really know a place, he believes, until you have seen it both as novel and as familiar. A landscape is no more than a picture postcard until you have spent time there and discover yourself in the midst of it. "The Desert Year" is a wonderful account of that process and a celebration of the joy that can be found in settling down for a while in a place that gradually comes to feel like home.
The most extraordinary insight into the magic of Tucson.Review Date: 1999-07-14


Don Benito Wilson: From Mountain Man to Mayor Los AngelesReview Date: 2008-07-22
Slices of Alta CaliforniaReview Date: 2008-06-16
Having to leave home as a teen, he became both a merchant and a mountain man, learning both commerce and the trapping skills of the Indians. Fleeing Santa Fe at age 30, he arrived in California with the first overland settlers in 1841. Intending to become a merchant in China, he failed (thrice) to make the boat from San Francisco, and instead bought a ranch near the San Gabriel mission - owning what we now call Riverside, California.
His adventures do not merely parallel the development of California; largely, they MAKE the development of California. He spanned both the Mexican and American eras, in marriage, politics, agriculture, commerce, railroads, Indian affairs, and especially real estate.
Though never taking Mexican citizenship, he married the daughter of a local don, became alcalde of the Riverside area, and finally joined the last Mexican government of Los Angeles. He was elected the first clerk of the new American Los Angeles, and its second mayor. As a state senator, he represented ALL of Southern California -- only a few thousand people.
The state was unbelieveably tiny. Many of the few hundred that voted in his elections in Los Angeles were drunks and Indians, rounded up the night before and paid (liquor or coin) to vote (as many times as possible). The center of the state popultion was *north* of San Francisco, as men poured in to the state to mine gold, and the few ranchers of Southern California raised the cattle to feed them.
On the land that B. J. Wilson owned, one million people now live. He created the first "gated community" in California -- when he fenced in the ranch that we now call Beverly Hills. He made much of what is now Pasadena, Altadena, and San Marino, both establishing the his vineyard at the foot of Lake Avenue, and dividing and developing his property for both Huntington (San Marino, Huntington Library) and for the Hoosiers (Pasadena). His real estate hands were in San Pedro (with Banning, owning the landing, developing the railroad, providing the US Army barracks), the Ballona marshlands (Marina del Rey), and downtown LA (especially the 12 acre site on the central plaza where Union Station now is). The road he cut up "Wilson's Mountain" for timber has later led to hotels, a major astronomical observatory complex, and to the home of nearly all Los Angeles's TV broadcast antennae.
His legacy is largely California itself, as his son failed into suicide, and the son-in-law to whom he turned over his vineyard lacked Wilson's imagination and vision. His one famous descedent was his grandson, Gen. George S. Patton, a man who shaped twentieth century events with the same gusto his grandfather had in the nineteenth.
Wilson's true legacy was the bussling city he helped create, developing it from dusty backwater adobe to thriving market town, atwitter with telegraph lines and railroads.
This book is not so much a single, chronological, narrative story as it is a collection of vignettes, anecdotes, and short stories about all the aspects of Wilson's life, with chapters on his mountain days, politics, the vineyard, Pasadena, San Pedro, the Mexican-American War, properties, railroads, etc. The material was extensively researched, from both first- and second-hand sources, and extensively footnoted. (Much of the research was done at the Huntington Library, just east of where Wilson's vineyard ranch-house stood.) This will be, for the twenty-first century, the definitive biography of a creator of nineteenth century California.
Wilson in the Wild WestReview Date: 2008-04-17
Used price: $23.40

Loud ring of truthReview Date: 2005-09-18
Dorie: Woman of the MountainsReview Date: 2000-06-13
Step Back in Time . . .Review Date: 2001-11-07

Used price: $10.00

"...extremely well written new work of Southwestern History"Review Date: 1998-03-04
Excellent contemporary treatise on Llano explorationsReview Date: 1998-03-07
very well written,very informativeReview Date: 1999-06-22


Look no further for the best guidebook !Review Date: 1999-09-23
Highly UsefulReview Date: 2004-07-09
Excellent and very thorough guideReview Date: 2002-05-13
If anyone is going to Pakistan, I would highly suggest getting this book. There are so many things that I have never known even though I was there for several months.

Used price: $9.16

14 families of pueblo potteryReview Date: 2006-11-11
Outstanding Update to an Old ClassicReview Date: 1999-04-27
Another art gemReview Date: 2008-08-14
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.

Used price: $7.75
Collectible price: $19.95

Outstanding Telling of an Overlooked PeriodReview Date: 2001-05-26
The majority of the book deals with the region North and West of Fort Worth, although all of the Western frontier of Texas is covered. The author combines the facts with explanations to cover a period when reliable records are scarce and myth/legend are legion. Particularly impressive are the descriptions of the Elm Creek Raid and Battle of Dove Creek.
In addition, Frontier Defense also briefly covers strategy & tactics used before and during the War Between the States.
Simplified maps of the frontier districts are included, but a good map of Texas is needed unless the reader is very familiar with the frontier outposts. The free Texas Historical Commission map "Texas in The Civil War" is an essential item needed to accompany this book.
The border with Mexico, Gulf Coast, and Eastern Texas are not covered as this regions are beyond the scope of the work.
An Excellent ReadReview Date: 2001-01-28
To arms in TexasReview Date: 2007-06-26
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