New Mexico Books
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Essays on life, living, and an incredible desertReview Date: 2006-12-10
Be careful...be very careful.Review Date: 2006-04-24

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addendum to prior reviewReview Date: 2002-01-24
Delight in words and pictures.Review Date: 2001-03-17

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Great Read!Review Date: 2008-08-10
A Giant takes on GiantsReview Date: 2008-08-09
If you are new to New Mexico, read this book for a better understanding of how we got to where we are today. If you live or work in New Mexico, keep this book handy and refer to it when you need to know how to get things done. Older folks will find lots to prompt their recollections, but, if you are young, read it to find an example of how to overcome challenges and leave a legacy greater than yourself.

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Tammy Garcia, Santa Clara Pueblo potter & artist extraordinaireReview Date: 2007-09-01
We were to learn that there was currently a sculpture exhibit in the garden area outside the museum featuring Tammy Garcia's recent large-scale works in bronze, which are amazing, and I also found this book in the museum gift shop and decided to purchase it later on-line (so I wouldn't have to carry it home).
Meanwhile, the next day in the Wheelwright museum, some people were purchasing Santa Clara pottery in the gift shop, and I learned more there, including which gallery featured Tammy Garcia's work in Santa Fe (Blue Rain) and how famous she is, and how nice a person and how sweet her two little daughters are as well. I did get to go to the gallery, and enjoyed every piece of Tammy Garcia's art I had the joy to see in person, though I cannot afford to purchase any of it myself. Not sure why, but the lady in the gallery gave me a copy of this book, either because I so obviously really, really, truly loved Tammy's work, as opposed to being just interested in whether I thought it would appreciate in value or impress my friends, or whether she didn't believe I really didn't have the money and thought I was going to return to buy a lot of art or was representing somebody; I prefer to think the former, but would be amused to think the latter.
In any case, I am thrilled to have the book, because it is what I can afford to have of Tammy Garcia's work, and her pottery is beautiful; if you get a chance to see it in person, please do; it's wonderful. Most of the book is pottery, which is how she started out, and the photographs are gorgeous; in recent years, she is "experimenting" with other media, such as glass and bronze, partly by collaborating with other artists, which you will also learn about in the last part of the book. Not that I am an expert or anything, but I would say she is beyond experimenting; her glass sculptures are very nice, and the bronzes are spectacular; I would be very proud to have any of her works in my home, although it would outclass everything else I own, pretty much. I am glad I also got to pick up the gallery's exhibition catalog which has more of Tammy Garcia's bronzes in it; and when I was in Taos, I also visited the Blue Rain Gallery there and saw a few more of her works just to be really complete.
All the Pueblos have their own individual styles, and Santa Clara and San Ildefonso's are particularly lovely, with their red-on-red and black-on-black highly polished pots--reading the description of how this is accomplished in another museum exhibit on Maria Martinez, it's a very labor intensive process, that is actually apparently done by hand polishing for many, many hours, as opposed to applying some kind of glaze to make the pots shiny. San Ildefonso's pottery is characterized more by stylized, etched surface designs, largely contributed by Maria's husband Julian, such as feathers (as seen in the Mimbres culture, to the south of the Puebloans) and water serpents.
Santa Clara pottery is additionally unique because of its carved, relief designs, giving the surface a 3-D aspect. Tammy Garcia's carvings are particularly bold, deep, and sharply defined, as if she is not at all afraid of cutting right through the soft clay; it is amazing to think of her handling the unbaked pots while stacking them for the firing process--how thin and fragile the carved-out areas must be, how easy to tear, and how hard to make perfectly sharp edges on the soft clay. Well, that is why her piece stood out in the first exhibit I saw and why she commands top prices and is sold in an exclusive gallery, because of her genius.
There is a quote from her in the book saying she is criticized as being "non-traditional," whatever that means. I am still not an expert, so you may take whatever I say with as many grains of salt as you wish, but the Santa Clara Pueblo still claims her (though she was born in Los Angeles), and her pottery appears to be in the Santa Clara style, and the museum displays one of her pieces in the Santa Clara section. Her pottery technique and colors and style are of Santa Clara type, though I don't know enough about the particular designs to know if they are traditional. Obviously, when she began to experiment with other media such as glass and bronze, that is non-traditional, and nobody, least of all herself claims it to be traditional, although she uses Indian designs and motifs in her artwork--but it's clearly a modern art form.
I did get to the Santa Clara Pueblo, unfortunately apparently during siesta time, but found one shop open on the highway, and bought a small pot there (not of course one of Tammy's), but it's very lovely. I hope to return to New Mexico and the Pueblos and to see more of the pottery soon. In the meantime, I can enjoy my memories, my Santa Clara pot, and this book.
BreathtakingReview Date: 2003-11-10

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Highly recommended for readers of all agesReview Date: 2006-11-05
A Visual Visit to Taos PuebloReview Date: 2006-03-13

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Lots of info......Review Date: 2007-01-14
A Definitive book on TaosReview Date: 2001-02-28
For anyone who is an expatriate Taoseno (as I am) or for those who are just interested in this fascinating little town, Bill Hemp has written and beautifully illustrated a coffee-table-type book that one can read all the way through without getting bored and return to often to enjoy the sketches and re-read specific chapters.
In it, you will find the history of the three cultures (Indian, Spanish and Anglo) that put Taos, New Mexico on the map as a place like no other place in the world. The ancient Anasazi settled around Taos in 1000 A.D. and Taos Pueblo (dating from about 1350) is the oldest continually occupied pueblo in the Southwest. When the Spanish arrived in 1540, they set their seal on the ancient community, building churches and missions and farming the land. Then Mabel Dodge Luhan "discovered" this magical place (it is said that Taos Mountain draws people) and an influx of Anglo artists and writers began, among them D.H. Lawrence, Andrew Dasburg, Georgia O'Keeffe, Ernest Blumenschein, Micolai Fechin...the list is too long to mention all of them here. Later, R.C. Gorman, John Nichols, Natalie Goldberg and many others who have achieved fame in the outside world made their home in Taos (which means, "place of the red willow").
Chapters are devoted to Kit Carson, Padre Martinez, the Penitentes, the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge and even the influx of hippies with a chapter on the New Buffalo commune in Arroyo Hondo north of Taos. There are maps, portraits, landscapes, architecture, quotes, reminiscences, stories of ghosts, little-known facts and even recipes (one for green chile stew) in this rich, very readable and delightful work. I found no inaccuracies but did find a great deal of information that I hadn't known about before. Highly recommended.
pamhan99@aol.com
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A Great Guide Developing for Distance Learning InstructorsReview Date: 2000-06-20
A "Bible" for ALL Distance Educators-A Must Read!Review Date: 2000-04-20

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Excellent adapation Review Date: 2005-11-08
Donna Gholson Cook
young cowboy takes part in a catttle driveReview Date: 2005-11-01


WH Jackson wrote in his diary everyday!Review Date: 2008-01-07
Interesting!Review Date: 2002-05-04

Well PleasedReview Date: 2008-04-12
THE HORSES OF YOUR WILDEST DREAMSReview Date: 2003-05-27
Author Rodney Barker provides the context for the history and spiritual background that is the special inspiration of the Southwestern and particularly Native American artists who so far have dominated this ongoing project.
I find I can't stop paging through this fantasy world of horses painted with Southwestern landscapes, Native American imagery, contemporary and futuristic themes that run the gamut from surprising realism, emotional subject matter, patriotism and humor. Better buy two -- one to thumb through on a regular basis and one to keep pristine!
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So I hope you'll enjoy a book about a wondrous place in the world that few people visit, and even fewer understand: El Gran Desierto, the Devil's Highway. Yes, this review is written by the author's sister, but don't hold that against me. Given my proclivity to reading fiction, I might not have picked up this book if my brother hadn't written it. I am so glad I had the opportunity to enjoy his vivid use of language and to vicariously experience some of Bill Broyles' adventures in the desert.