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NEW MEXICO BOOKS

Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

Written by Stanley G. Crawford. By University of New Mexico Press. The regular list price is $9.95. Sells new for $58.65. There are some available for $17.88.
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2 comments about Log of the S.S. the Mrs. Unguentine.
  1. This neglected masterpiece needs to be returned to print immediately. It is one of the greatest novels of the past half century. Prose this exquisite and sad and funny deserves a wide, ecstatic readership. This is a sea-tale about the deep loneliness between intimates and how that very loneliness can result in an even more powerful bond.


  2. if you like to read books that are interesting and strange and funny and sad you will like to read this book. this book is much better than this review. the book is well written, this review is not. everything this review lacks, the novel contains. if you like boats you must read this book. this review is failing to do this book justice. it is very good, you will be happy, it will make you smile.


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Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

Written by James William Steele. By Rand, McNally & Company. There are some available for $35.64.
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No comments about Rand, McNally & Co.'s new guide to the Pacific coast: Santa FeÌ route : California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Kansas.



Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

Montana Places: Exploring Big Sky Country Written by John B. Wright and Jack Wright. By New Mexico Geographical Society. The regular list price is $51.00. Sells new for $49.51. There are some available for $0.01.
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1 comments about Montana Places: Exploring Big Sky Country.
  1. If people want to write books about beautiful places, they should put at least one colored picture in it. The only color was on the cover. If I had known there were no colored pictures inside the book, I never would have purchased it.


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Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

Desert Wetlands Written by Lucian Niemeyer and Thomas Lowe Fleischner. By University of New Mexico Press. Sells new for $29.95. There are some available for $26.96.
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2 comments about Desert Wetlands.
  1. Lucien Niemeyer and Thomas Lowe Fleischner's Desert Wetlands is a 'must' for any collection focused on ecology and desert environments. 'Desert wetlands' may seem an inconsistent term, but there are indeed wetlands in the desert, as photographer Lucian Niemeyer and environmental scientist Thomas Fleischner demonstrate. While Niemeyer photographs such wetlands in Arizona, Utah and New Mexico, among other states, naturalist Fleischner provides stories about water and his encounters with desert wetlands during his field research in the southwest.


  2. All our states have wetlands. But the wetlands in the Chihuahuan, Great Basin, Mojave and Sonoran deserts play a much more important role than wetlands in the east. For northern birds and mountain animals migrate down south to these deserts for food, mating and water. They can't count on water from rainfall. The area's so hot rain dries back into the air. That's exactly why they're called deserts. The original word in Latin means abandoned or forsaken. And deserts have been abandoned or forsaken by water.

    But that's in terms of rain water. In fact, these deserts have water. The water's found in areas called wetlands. Wetland water comes from three sources. One's mountain snow melting in spring and fall. Much of that water stays in mountain bogs, lakes and ponds dammed by beavers. But some always trickles into the deserts during the summer. Another's the underground water table. That's becoming a problem. More cattle-grazing also means more cows drinking water. More people working, playing and living in the areas means more Americans using water.

    The last source is area rivers, such as the Rio Grande and the San Pedro, San Juan, Escalante and Colorado rivers. All the great area rivers start out as source number 1. For they trace back to melted snow of the Cascade, Rocky, San Juan and Sierra Nevada mountains. River water's also becoming a problem. More cattle tanks, dams, reservoirs and stock ponds change river water levels and routes. Changed water levels and routes will change living conditions for area plants, bugs, birds and animals.

    Specifically, two main types of plant communities grow up along southwest rivers. One's a mixed broadleaf of willow, walnut, sycamore, cottonwood, ash and alder. That's usually found along rocky streams. The other's a forest of cottonwoods and willows. That's usually found on flooded sand, gravel and clay plains. But non-native Russian olive in the north and tamarisk in the south are giving native cottonwoods and willows a beating. White pelicans and sandhill cranes see native trees as familiar landmarks of desert wetland homes. In fact, cottonwoods and willows are homes to more breeding birds than anywhere else in North America. Breeding birds and their babies find the healthest foods, full of proteins and vegetables, in cottonwood and willow leaves full of insects.

    Desert wetlands make up only 3.5% of total U.S. lands. But after tropical rainforests, they're the world's second largest supporters of plant, bug, bird and animal life. Also, they're homes to 50% of all our endangered animals. It all comes down to link after link between native plants, bugs, birds and animals built up over time in one area.

    Photographer Lucien Niemeyer and writer Thomas Lowe Fleischner have come up with an impressive book. The writing's clearly organized. The photographs are stunning. The examples are to-the-point. The last chapter's followed by a list of all plants and animals covered by the book. The book ends with a helpful set of notes and a current bibliography.

    Without drama and with supported facts, this team has given us what we need to know about that problem area where people and nature are closing in on each other. It's what Virginia Tech master gardening calls the wildlands-urban interface between people and nature. That's the big concern nowadays. And it's not going to go away.


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Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

Written by Max Evans. By Univ of New Mexico Pr. The regular list price is $5.95. Sells new for $26.52. There are some available for $4.85.
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No comments about Xavier's Folly, and Other Stories.



Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

Las Cruces   (NM)  (Images of America) Written by Jon Hunner and Brian Kord and Cassandra Lachica and Renee Spence. By Arcadia Publishing. The regular list price is $19.99. Sells new for $11.99. There are some available for $12.90.
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No comments about Las Cruces (NM) (Images of America).






Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

All Aboard for Santa Fe: Railway Promotion of the Southwest, 1890s to 1930s Written by Victoria E. Dye. By University of New Mexico Press. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $12.82. There are some available for $10.00.
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1 comments about All Aboard for Santa Fe: Railway Promotion of the Southwest, 1890s to 1930s.
  1. Author has extracted oodles of technical references into an overview that covers a vital sixty-year span of American Southwest history. Victoria Dye skillfully illuminates the intertwining of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Company (AT&SF) with its more visual counterpart and partner, the Fred Harvey Company. In a mere six chapters, along with a smattering of descriptive BW photos, the author summarizes the wild ethnic mixture of the early Southwestern frontier with a strong emphasis on the economic impact of the myriad cultures. She describes how Harvey and AT&SF precipitated the view of pioneer New Mexico and Arizona as `Indian' more than `Mexican or Spanish,' even though the domineering government and religion was of the latter for hundreds of years. Dye further characterizes how the Harvey/AT&SF promotions helped travelers [remarkably] overcome the spectre of Indian hostilities, replacing fear with their inventive illusion of `Santa Fe' gentility. Marketing, promotion and economics are the core of the book. The author is to be highly commended for distilling five centuries of Cultural Revolution in to 100 pages of easy reading. The bibliography yields [literally] hundreds of literary resources (perhaps this book's most valuable contribution) for further reader interest. The author's supplemental material helps substantiate a "who's who" timeline of AT&SF, Fred Harvey, Santa Fe, curio and Southwestern Indian history - don't miss these appendix, page notes, and bibliographic features!


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Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

North with De Anza: A Historical Novel Written by Dorothy W. Erskine. By University of New Mexico Press. The regular list price is $9.95. Sells new for $7.86. There are some available for $1.49.
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No comments about North with De Anza: A Historical Novel.






Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

By The Register Guard. Sells new for $5.95.
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No comments about Students sing to travel `down Mexico way'.(Schools)(The musical will help pay a Cottage Grove High club's cost to go south of the border): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR).



Posted in New Mexico (Friday, November 21, 2008)

Written by Athi-Mara Magadi. By Museum of New Mexico Press. There are some available for $104.00.
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No comments about Santa Fe Originals: Women of Distinction.



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Log of the S.S. the Mrs. Unguentine
Rand, McNally & Co.'s new guide to the Pacific coast: Santa FeÌ route : California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Kansas
Montana Places: Exploring Big Sky Country
Desert Wetlands
Xavier's Folly, and Other Stories
Las Cruces (NM) (Images of America)
All Aboard for Santa Fe: Railway Promotion of the Southwest, 1890s to 1930s
North with De Anza: A Historical Novel
Students sing to travel `down Mexico way'.(Schools)(The musical will help pay a Cottage Grove High club's cost to go south of the border): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Santa Fe Originals: Women of Distinction

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Last updated: Fri Nov 21 15:48:59 EST 2008