Fall 2014 - The University of New Mexico Press

Transcription

Fall 2014 - The University of New Mexico Press
university of new mexico press
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1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
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universit y of new mexico press fall 2014
university of new mexico press fall 2014
university of new mexico press
(505) 277-3495 •
(800) 622-8667 or (505) 272-7778
[email protected]
www.unmpress.com
fa x
The University of New Mexico Press, founded in 1929, plays a vital role in preserving the cultures,
languages, and histories of New Mexico and the Southwest. Our purpose is to advance and
disseminate knowledge through the publication of books and electronic media, educate present
and future generations, and to further the mission of the University of New Mexico, supporting
research, education, and community service.
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our publishing objectives. Gifts to the Press enable us to
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To discuss funding opportunities at the Press, including
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general endowment, please contact:
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[email protected]
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Prices shown are effective July 1, 2014, and
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contents
2015 Enchanting New Mexico
Calendar
Parent . . . 34
2015 New Mexico Artist
Calendar
Highsmith . . . 34
Advocates for the Oppressed
Ebright . . . 49
Africans into Creoles
Lohse . . . 58
Astronomy and Ceremony
in the Prehistoric
Southwest: Revisited
Munson, Bostwick, &
Hull . . . 61
Autobiography in Black
and Brown
Garcia . . . 44–45
Broken Promises
Harris . . . 17
Bush League Boys
Smith . . . 9
A Carol Dickens Christmas
Averill . . . 13
Chasing Dichos through
Chimayó
Usner . . . 52
Conjugal Bliss
Nichols . . . 16
Creating Mexican Consumer
Culture in the Age of
Porfirio Díaz
Bunker . . . 53
The Daily Practice of
Compassion
Wang & Carter . . . 35
Daniel Sprick’s Fictions
Strandring . . . 31
Deborah Paris
Delaney, Tillman, Eidson, &
Clark . . . 32
Dispatches from the Drownings
Hollars . . . 23
Enduring Acequias
Arellano . . . 10
800–249–7737
The Excavation of the
Prehistoric Burial Tumulus
at Lofkënd, Albania
Papadopoulos, Morris, Bejko,
& Schepartz . . . 62
Global West, American Frontier
Wrobel . . . 48
Goin’ Crazy with Sam Peckinpah
and All Our Friends
Evans & Nott . . . 4–5
How Long Is the Present
Fredman . . . 47
Intimate Memories
Rudnick . . . 11
Loose Cannons
Middleton . . . 46
Manuel Carrillo
Ashman . . . 29
Massacre of the Dreamers
Castillo . . . 42–43
The Memory of Stone
Schroeder . . . 24–25
Mysterious New Mexico
Radford . . . 8
The National Council on
Indian Opportunity
Britten . . . 50
New Insights into the Iron
Age Archaeology of Edom,
Southern Jordan
Levy, Najjar, &
Ben-Yosef . . . 63
New Mexico’s Spanish
Livestock Heritage
Dunmire . . . 51
Painting the Divine
Diaz & Stratton-Pruitt . . . 30
The Powwow Highway
Seals . . . 14
Railroad Empire across the
Heartland
Sherow & Charlton . . . 26–27
Searching for Madre Matiana
Wright-Rios . . . 54–55
A Selected History of Her Heart
Oles . . . 19
The Sky Is Shooting
Blue Arrows
Luschei & Woodward . . . 18
Sophie’s House of Cards
Warner . . . 12
Spiritual Currency in
Northeast Brazil
King . . . 60
Sweet Medicine
Seals . . . 15
Taos Portraits
O’Connor & Whaley . . . 28
Time Served
Contreras . . . 20
Tortillas
Morton . . . 6–7
What the Bird Tattoo Hides
Bohm . . . 22
William Cather Hook
McGarry . . . 33
A Woman in Pieces Crossed
a Sea
Bergman . . . 21
Women Drug Traffickers
Carey . . . 56–57
Yoruba Traditions and
African American Religious
Nationalism
Hucks . . . 59
univer sity of new mexico press
University of New Mexico Press
1717 Roma NE
Albuquerque, NM 87106
505-277-3495
1
trade
biography
•
film
•
american west
Goin’ Crazy with Sam Peckinpah
and All Our Friends
max evans; as told to robert nott
A
lmost as famous for the legendary excesses of his personal life as for his films,
Sam Peckinpah (1925–1984) cemented his reputation as one of the great American
directors with movies such as The Wild Bunch and Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid. Max
Evans, one of Peckinpah’s best friends, experienced the director’s mercurial character and
personal demons firsthand. In this enthralling memoir we follow Evans and Peckinpah
through conversations in bars, family gatherings, binges on drugs and alcohol, struggles with film producers and executives, and Peckinpah’s abusive behavior—sometimes
directed at Evans himself.
Evans’s stories—most previously unpublished—provide a uniquely intimate look at
Peckinpah, their famous friends (including Lee Marvin, Brian Keith, Joel McCrea, and
James Coburn), and the business of Hollywood in the 1960s and 1970s.
4
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
“A remarkable memoir by a true westerner, Max Evans, on the wild, turbulent life
and career of the great Sam Peckinpah, a man who created so much,
and destroyed so much, in his all-too-brief life.”
—john l. simons, coauthor of peckinpah’s tragic westerns: a critical study
max evans, a novelist, artist, one-time cowboy, miner, and dealer in antiquities, lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Among his many lifetime achievements are the New Mexico Governor’s
Award for Excellence in the Arts, the Western Writers of America’s Owen Wister Award for
lifelong contributions to the field of western literature, and, most recently, the Texas Institute
of Letters Lon Tinkle Award. His novels The Rounders and The Hi-Lo Country were made into
feature cult films.
robert nott has been a reporter for the Santa Fe New Mexican for more than fifteen years.
Among his previous books are The Films of Randolph Scott and He Ran All the Way: The Life of
John Garfield.
October
272 pp.
6×9
33 halftones
$27.95 cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-3587-6
$34.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-3588-3
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Madam Millie
Bordellos from Silver City to
Ketchikan
Max Evans
$21.95 paper 978-0-8263-2783–3
univer sity of new mexico press
5
cooking and food history
•
l at i n a m e r i c a
paula e. morton is a journalist in St. Augustine, Florida. She is also the author of Tabloid
Valley: Supermarket News and American Culture.
Tortillas
A Cultural History
paula e. morton
“The ordinary tortilla was an extraordinary bond between the human and divine.
. . . From birthdays to religious ceremonies, the people of Mesoamerica
commemorated important events with tortillas. One Maya tribe even
buried their dead with tortillas so that the dogs eaten as dinner during life
would not bite the deceased in revenge.”
—from tortillas: a cultural history
October
160 pp.
6×9
32 halftones, 3 maps
Also of Interest
$24.95 paper
The Story of Corn
Betty Fussell
ISBN 978-0-8263-5214-9
$27.95 paper 978-0-8263-3592-0
$30.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5215-6
6
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
F
or centuries tortillas have remained a staple of the Mexican diet, but the rich significance of this unleavened flatbread stretches far beyond food. Today the tortilla crosses
cultures and borders as part of an international network of people, customs, and culinary
traditions.
In this entertaining and informative account Paula E. Morton surveys the history of
the tortilla from its roots in ancient Mesoamerica to the cross-cultural global tortilla. Morton tells the story of tortillas and the people who make and eat them—from the Mexican
woman rolling the mano over the metate to grind corn, to the enormous wheat tortillas
made in northern Mexico, to twenty-first-century elaborations like the stuffed burrito.
This study—the first to extensively present the tortilla’s history, symbolism, and impact—
shows how the tortilla has changed our understanding of home cooking, industrialized
food, healthy cuisine, and the people who live across borders.
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
7
southwest
•
mystery
•
folklore
benjamin radford, the deputy editor of the Skeptical
Inquirer science magazine, is the author of Tracking the
Chupacabra: The Vampire Beast in Fact, Fiction, and Folklore (UNM Press) and other books. He lives in Corrales,
New Mexico.
Mysterious New Mexico
Miracles, Magic, and Monsters in the Land of Enchantment
benjamin radford
New Mexico’s twin traditions of the scientific and the supernatural meet for the first time
in this long-overdue book by a journalist known for investigating the unexplained. Strange
tales of ghosts, monsters, miracles, lost treasure, UFOs, and much more can be found not
far from the birthplace of the atomic bomb. Huge radio astronomy dishes search desert
skies for alien life, and the world’s first spaceport can be found in this enchanted land; in
many ways New Mexico truly is a portal to other worlds.
Mysterious New Mexico is the first book to apply scientific investigation methods to
explain some of New Mexico’s most bizarre lore and legends. Using folklore, sociology,
history, psychology, and forensic science—as well as good old-fashioned detective work—
Radford reveals the truths and myths behind New Mexico’s greatest mysteries.
“Radford’s research into the unexplained is always informative, lively,
and entertaining, and Mysterious New Mexico is no exception.”
—patrick burns, trutv’s haunting evidence
August
February
216
296pp.
pp.
5.5×x98.5
6
61 halftones,
$19.95
paper 1 table
978-0-8263-5436-5
$24.95 paper
$22.95 CAD
ISBN 978-0-8263-5450-1
e-ISBN 978-0-8263-5437-2
$30.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5452-5
8
Also of Interest
Tracking the Chupacabra
The Vampire Beast in Fact, Fiction,
and Folklore
Benjamin Radford
$24.95 paper 978-0-8263-5015-2
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
sports history
•
southwest
toby smith is the author or coauthor of nine books,
including Little Gray Men: Roswell and the Rise of a Popular Culture (UNM Press). He lives in Albuquerque, New
Mexico.
Bush League Boys
The Postwar Legends of Baseball in the American Southwest
toby smith
This loving tribute to the defunct minor league teams of New Mexico and west Texas resurrects a forgotten period of baseball history. Through oral histories of players, umpires, fans,
sportswriters, and team officials, Toby Smith brings to life the West Texas–New Mexico
League, the Longhorn League, the Southwestern League, and the Sophomore League from
1946 to 1961, when the last of them folded. Star players Joe Bauman and Bob Crues get
special attention, along with assorted brawls, a fatal beaning incident, home runs, and marriages conducted at home plate. Anyone who loves baseball will enjoy this delightful book.
“In Bush League Boys sportswriter Toby Smith relies upon fascinating oral histories to recall the home runs, screen money, and dust storms that characterized the
glory days of post–World War II baseball in the Southwest.”
—ron briley, author of the baseball film in postwar america:
a critical study, 1948–1962
November
224 pp.
6.125 × 9.25
30 halftones, 1 map
Also of Interest
$24.95 paper
Bunion Derby
The 1928 Footrace Across America
ISBN 978-0-8263-5521-8
Charles B. Kastner
$30.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5522-5
$19.95 cloth 978-0-8263-4301-7
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
9
e n v i r o n m e n ta l s t u d i e s
•
american west
•
southwest
juan estevan arellano is a poet, artist, writer, and
farmer in Embudo, New Mexico. His previous books include
Ancient Agriculture: Roots and Application of Sustainable
Farming and Inocencio: Ni pica ni escarda, pero siempre se
come el major elote.
Querencias Series
Enduring Acequias
Wisdom of the Land, Knowledge of the Water
juan estevan arellano
For generations the Río Embudo watershed in northern New Mexico has been the home
of Juan Estevan Arellano and his ancestors. From this unique perspective Arellano explores the ways people use water in dry places around the world. Touching on the Middle
East, Europe, Mexico, and South America before circling back to New Mexico, Arellano
makes a case for preserving the acequia irrigation system and calls for a future that respects the ecological limitations of the land.
“Only Juan Estevan Arellano could have written about the sacred knowledge of
water from the perspective of a nuevomexicano who has spent a lifetime observing
and learning from his elders and mentors, people who passed on to him the
memory of the land, water, and community. Arellano should be declared a State
of New Mexico Historic Treasure.”
—josé a. rivera, author of la sociedad: guardians of hispanic
culture along the rio grande
October
216 pp.
6×9
24 halftones
$24.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5507-2
$30.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5508-9
10
Also of Interest
Thinking Like a Watershed
Voices from the West
Edited by Jack Loeffler & Celestia
Loeffler
$24.95 paper 978-0-8263-5233-0
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
american studies
•
biography
•
southwest
lois palken rudnick is a professor emerita of American studies at the University of Massachusetts, Boston.
She lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Intimate Memories
t h e au t o b i o g r a p h y o f m a b e l d o d g e l u h a n
AVAILABLE AGAIN
Edited by Lois Palken Rudnick
Intimate Memories
The Autobiography of Mabel Dodge Luhan
edited by lois palken rudnick
Mabel Dodge Luhan’s Intimate Memories offers the brilliantly edited memoirs of one
woman’s rebellion against “the whole ghastly social structure” under which the United
States had been buried since the Victorian era. Luhan fled the Gilded Age prison of the
upper classes to lead a life of notoriety among Europe and America’s leading artists, writers, and social visionaries—among them D. H. Lawrence, Gertrude Stein, and John Reed.
Intimate Memories details Luhan’s assemblage of a series of utopian domains aimed
at curing the malaise of the modern age and shows Luhan not just as a visionary hostess
but as a talented and important writer.
“Profoundly perceptive and always at the edge of revelation, Luhan called herself
‘a mythological figure right in my own lifetime.’ . . . The writing exudes Luhan’s
feelings of insatiable searching.”
—publishers weekly
July
296 pp.
6.125 × 9.25
$24.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-2106-0
$30.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-3249-3
Also of Interest
The Suppressed Memoirs of Mabel
Dodge Luhan
Sex, Syphilis, and Psychoanalysis in
the Making of Modern American
Culture
Edited by Lois Palken Rudnick
800–249–7737
$34.95s cloth 978-0-8263-5119-7
univer sity of new mexico press
11
fiction
sharon oard warner is the author of Learning to
Dance and Other Stories and the novel Deep in the Heart.
She is also the editor of The Way We Write Now: Short Stories from the AIDS Crisis. A professor of English at the University of New Mexico, Warner is the founder and director
of the Taos Summer Writers’ Conference.
Sophie’s House of Cards
A Novel
sharon oard warner
When sixteen-year-old Sophie Granger suspects she is pregnant, she digs out her mother
Peggy’s tarot cards. Peggy hasn’t read fortunes since her hippie days in Taos, but as soon
as she flips the cards, Peggy sees both her daughter’s predicament and the family crisis
that will ensue. A panicked Peggy scatters the layout and rushes from the room, leaving
Sophie to construct a literal house of cards. Set in New Mexico, this engrossing family
novel raises questions about the role that fortune plays in our lives.
“A deftly woven story textured with beautifully flawed characters who
redefine what it means to be a family in an age where love, not
blood, connects all creatures—from humans to honeybees.
What a charming and deeply compassionate novel.”
—bk loren, author of theft: a novel
October
344 pp.
6×9
11 drawings
Also of Interest
$24.95 paper
Mama Fela’s Girls
A Novel
ISBN 978-0-8263-3077-2
Ana Baca
$30.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-3078-9
$24.95 cloth 978-0-8263-4023-8
12
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
fiction
thomas fox averill’s rode and Secrets of the Tsil Café: A
Novel with Recipes are also available from the University of
New Mexico Press. He teaches at Washburn University in
Topeka, Kansas.
A Carol Dickens Christmas
A Novel
thomas fox averill
It’s Christmas, and Carol Dickens’s life is in major transition. Her son Finn, a talented
trumpet player, is about to leave for college. Her ex-husband, a real-estate wheelerdealer, wants to sell their properties in Kansas and move to Arizona. Her wheelchair-bound
friend, Laurence, has fallen in love with her. To top it all off, Scraps, the family dog, is
dying. As her world spins out of control, Carol seeks refuge in her research on the use of
the semicolon—and in her ritual of cooking the perfect series of Victorian holiday meals
inspired by A Christmas Carol.
“This book is a gift, a stirring mix of Dickens; Hispanic American culture; food,
drink, and generosity, brought together with a perfectly measured plot and spiced
with Averill’s savory prose. Recommended cold-weather reading, but will bring back
the flavor of the holidays at any time of the year.”
—john reimringer, author of vestments
August
280 pp.
5×8
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5501-0
$24.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5502-7
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Secrets of the Tsil Café
A Novel with Recipes
Thomas Fox Averill
$19.95 paper 978-0-8263-5112-8
univer sity of new mexico press
13
fiction
•
american indians
david seals lives in Flagstaff, Arizona.
The Powwow Highway
A Novel
david seals
Philbert Bono and Buddy Red Bird are about to prove that the spirit of the great warriors
is still alive and kicking. Their “war pony,” a burned-out, rusty 1964 Buick LeSabre, has
left a trail of dust from Montana’s Lame Deer Reservation halfway down Interstate 25 as
they take off to bail Buddy’s sister out of jail. The basis for the great movie of the same
name, this quiet debut novel, first published in 1979, has become a classic of American
Indian literature.
“Irresistible . . . inspired . . . deeply satisfying.” —los
angeles times
“Takes us into the places where Indians live . . . their jokes, their lovemaking, their
hearts. . . . Leaves me feeling as if I had made the journey myself.” —denver post
“An up-to-date account of being Indian in America. . . . A tale of visions and
magic, told with irreverent reverence.” —santa fe reporter
September
320 pp.
6×9
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5489-1
$24.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5490-7
14
Also of Interest
rode
Thomas Fox Averill
$19.95 paper 978-0-8263-5030-5
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
fiction
•
american indians
Sweet Medicine
A Novel
david seals
This sequel to Seals’s acclaimed novel The Powwow Highway recounts the further
adventures of Philbert Bono, Buddy Red Bird, and Bonnie Red Bird in a soul-searching
vision quest for self-discovery that is by turns exhilarating, hilarious, profane, and achingly beautiful.
“Full of adventure, humor, love and sex, and occasionally some eloquent rage about
the way Indians have been treated in America. . . . A trickster tale . . . in which a . . .
clever and resourceful hero outsmarts stronger enemies and lives to fight another day.”
—new york times book review
“A lively and sardonic look at native realities in America today, coupled with flights of
wit and whimsical fancy that ring equally true: a potent, thoroughly enjoyable tale.”
—kirkus reviews
September
296 pp.
6×9
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5491-4
$24.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5492-1
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
A Sandhills Ballad
Ladette Randolph
$17.95 cloth 978-0-8263-4685-8
univer sity of new mexico press
15
fiction
john nichols’s most recent novel is On Top of Spoon
Mountain (UNM Press). Among his many other books
is The Milagro Beanfield War.
Conjugal Bliss
A Comedy of Martial Arts
john nichols
“Nichols writes with panache and great wit.” —publishers
weekly
“A hilarious, raucous, painfully graphic portrait of The Marriage from Hell.”
—chicago tribune
“Funny and sexy. . . . A nonstop comedy of errors.” —detroit
free press
What happens when two oft-divorced and middle-aged sex fiends tie the knot again? Birds
do it, bees do it, and Roger and Zelda do it whenever their teenage kids aren’t looking.
Their ecstasy is boundless. But when the darker side of Paradise rears its comical head,
they suddenly find themselves trapped in a Three Stooges movie directed by Freddy
Krueger. This takeoff on matrimony will make you laugh, scream, or grind your teeth in
recognition. If you are hitched yourself, take three Valiums before reading!
August
248 pp.
6×9
$19.95s paper
Also of Interest
ISBN 978-0-8263-5484-6
On Top of Spoon Mountain
John Nichols
$24.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5485-3
$24.95 cloth 978-0-8263-5270-5
$19.95 paper 978-0-8263-5271-2
16
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
western
•
short stories
Broken Promises
La Frontera Publishing Presents the American West, More
Great Short Stories from America’s Newest Western Writers
introduction by michael t. harris
La Frontera Publishing presents Broken Promises, its latest collection of thirteen fictional
short stories and one novella about the Wild West from America’s newest Western writers, authors who may become tomorrow’s legends of Western literature.
The West was built on a handshake and a promise. But sometimes those promises
were broken, and the consequences could be fearful. Whether it was the nation’s broken
promises to tribal leaders or a vow to revenge a wounded heart, the price would have to
be paid in blood and tears.
July
220 pp.
6×9
$18.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-9857551-6-4
$23.95 CAD
La Frontera Publishing
Also of Interest
Dead or Alive
La Frontera Publishing Presents the
American West, Great Short Stories
from America’s Newest Western
Writers
Introduction by Michael T. Harris
800–249–7737
$18.95 paper 978-0-9857551-4-0
univer sity of new mexico press
17
poetry
glenna luschei is the author of more than twenty-five
books and is the founder and publisher of Solo Press. She
lives in San Luis Obispo, California.
Mary Burritt Christiansen Poetry Series
The Sky Is Shooting Blue Arrows
Poems
glenna luschei; edited by noel woodward
“The Sky Is Shooting Blue Arrows is filled with such a vivid and tactile sense
of place—New Mexico, Turkey, the Black Hills—each poem is a bodily pleasure.
The Sky Is Shooting Blue Arrows is a place you must visit, a journey
you will be glad you took, a book you must read.”
—jesse lee kercheval, author of cinema muto
In this new book Glenna Luschei’s poems take her and her readers around the world,
including to Tunisia and Colombia, but in the end they return to center on the American West, where her heart lies. Celebrating life, travel, aging, and nature, this new book
shines with Luschei’s view of the world.
September
96 pp.
6×9
$18.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5493-8
$23.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5494-5
18
Also of Interest
Progress on the Subject of
Immensity
Leslie Ullman
$18.95 paper 978-0-8263-5362-7
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
poetry
carole simmons oles is the author of eight other
books of poetry, including The Deed: Poems and Waking
Stone: Inventions on the Life of Harriet Hosmer.
Mary Burritt Christiansen Poetry Series
A Selected History of Her Heart
Poems
carole simmons oles
“Through the lens of her singular and compelling life, Carole Simmons Oles guides
us through our fractured, confused, violent century. At seventy, facing an increasingly fragile body, Oles crafts language that creates bonds—across cultures and
tongues, across decades and oceans and continents. These powerhouse poems reach
out generation to generation with generosity and compassion. These poems invite us
in, offer food and drink and shelter.”
—peggy shumaker, author of gnawed bones
Travel, blood, and transgression are the materials that art shapes in these poems. Carole
Simmons Oles’s work moves among physical, spiritual, and metaphorical frontiers where
East meets West, where relationships are forged and broken, and where a woman can
now process and reflect on the experiences that have shaped her life.
September
72 pp.
6×9
$18.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5513-3
$23.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5514-0
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
The Goldilocks Zone
Kate Gale
$18.95 paper 978-0-8263-5432-7
univer sity of new mexico press
19
poetry
carlos contreras is a writing teacher and National
Poetry Slam Champion. For five years he has taught incarcerated adults at the Gordon Bernell Charter School in the
Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico. He is the lead facilitator for the Voces
youth writing program at the National Hispanic Cultural
Center and a cofounder of Just Write, a prison and public
writing program. His previous chapbooks include A Man
in Pieces and The Black Book.
West End Press New Series
Time Served
carlos contreras
This provocative debut from National Poetry Slam Champion Carlos Contreras is a conversation in two parts: one, a monologue-style musing on working in a correction facility
told from an insider/outsider perspective; and two, an homage to veterans of other kinds
of war who must learn to live inside and outside their own prisons of mind and body.
“Time Served is poetic proof of Carlos Contreras’s personal and literary commitment to serve as a respectful and honest witness to painful struggles, dark corners,
unexpected art, and honest humanity that exist in and outside of correctional facilities; exist in and outside of not-so-perfect, but loving families; and most definitely
reside within all human beings.”
—shelle sanchez, new mexico department of cultural affairs
April 2014
69 pp.
5.5 × 8.5
$12.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-9910742-1-1
$15.50 CAD
West End Press
20
Also of Interest
Swear
Hakim Bellamy
$14.95 paper 978-0-9826968-9-7
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
poetry
denise bergman describes herself as “very much a city
person”; her home is Central Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Originally a painter, she edited City River of
Voices, a collection of Boston urban poetry, for West End
Press in 1992. Her creative work includes Seeing Annie
Sullivan, The Telling, and the poem Red, an excerpt from
which is permanently installed as public art in Dana Park,
Cambridge. Author photo by Stephan Likosky.
A Woman in Pieces Crossed a Sea
Denise Bergman
For one year after its arrival in the United States the dismantled Statue of Liberty sat in
214 unopened crates on Bedloe’s Island in New York Harbor. The poems in this book
reflect the tension of this “pause” in many respects: the artist’s motives in constructing
the pieces; the fluidity of the molten ore; the workers’ act of constructing, dismantling,
and reassembling the statue; the anticipation embedded in the year on Bedloe’s Island;
the vulnerability of a singular message as it travels across an ocean and over time; and the
context into which the statue is finally unveiled.
Bergman’s masterful narrative, told in lyric pieces, of the transportation, installation,
and metaphorical presence of the Statue of Liberty serves not only as a paean to the work
of her transporters but a meditation on her arrival in a land whose history she can hardly
hope to accommodate. Tactile, descriptive, and wise, these poems recover part of our past
while delivering us to a still-uncertain present.
May 2014
72 pp.
5.5 × 8.5
$14.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-9910742-2-8
$18.95 CAD
West End Press
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Always Messing With Them Boys
Jessica Helen Lopez
$13.95 paper 978-0-9826968-4-2
univer sity of new mexico press
21
poetry
robert bohm was born in Queens, New York, in 1943
and served in the U.S. Army from 1967 to 1968 at a receiving hospital in Germany during the Vietnam War. His first
book, In the Americas, won the Great Lakes Colleges Association award for poetry in 1980. In his later work, Closing
the Hotel Kitchen (West End Press), he portrayed growing
up in New York, surviving the traumatic consequences of
war in Vietnam, and subsequently departing to India.
What the Bird Tattoo Hides
robert bohm
In a new, compelling poetry collection, What the Bird Tattoo Hides, Bohm arrives in rural
India in 1968, “seeking truth’s taste.” His stories about many of its personalities, including outsiders and their hidden histories, reveal the daily lives of haughty Sundara, labor
leader Dev Raj, Meeda Mama, and Dada who likes “a few rums / before supper,” as they
work, argue, celebrate, and raise their children, struggling to better their lives and sometimes taking up arms to fight for caste and class justice.
Bohm’s work challenges the West’s falsely exotic and colonial view of India. As he
chronicles three generations in a single village, the author evokes a world that is both more
haphazard and violent, and also more human and present, than one would otherwise
have been able to imagine. Using sensuous, gritty, and stunning language, he confronts
the nature of death and change, realizing that “Wherever the body is, and no matter /
how unknown the locale, / it is home.”
August
156 pp.
6×9
$15.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-9910742-4-2
$19.95 CAD
West End Press
22
Also of Interest
Closing the Hotel Kitchen
Robert Bohm
$13.95 paper 978-0-9826968-1-1
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
american studies
•
journalism
b. j. hollar s is an assistant professor of English
at the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire. His
most recent book is Opening the Doors: The Desegregation of the University of Alabama and the Fight for
Civil Rights in Tuscaloosa.
Dispatches from the Drownings
Reporting the Fiction of Nonfiction
b. j. hollar s
Disturbed by stories of drownings in the river behind his home in Eau Claire, Wisconsin,
writer B. J. Hollars combed the archives of local newspapers only to discover vast discrepancies in articles about the deaths. In homage to Michael Lesy’s cult classic, Wisconsin
Death Trip, Hollars pairs reports from late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century journalists with fictional versions, creating a hybrid text complete with facts, lies, and a wide
range of blurring in between. Charles Van Schaick’s macabre, staged photographs from
the era appear alongside the dispatches, further complicating the messiness of history
and the limits of truth.
“Hollars has created a mesmerizing experience for the reader, an experiment that
re-creates the way our minds piece together stories from the murky depths of what is
there and what is imagined.” —jill talbot, editor of metawritings
September
184 pp.
8 × 10
47 halftones, 1 map
Also of Interest
$29.95 paper
Wisconsin Death Trip
Michael Lesy
ISBN 978-0-8263-5503-4
$34.95 paper 978-0-8263-2193-0
$37.50 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5504-1
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
23
24
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
photography
•
southwest
erv schroeder is a photographer who also
works as a user-interface analyst and graphic and
web designer. He lives in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.
His work has been widely exhibited in galleries all
over the United States. He has been an artist in
residence at the Petrified Forest National Park and
a featured artist in F-Stop magazine.
The Memory of Stone
Meditations on the Canyons of the West
photographs by erv schroeder; foreword by
bill mckibben; essay by marcia bjornerud;
introduction by simon j. ortiz
This intimate portrait of the Colorado Plateau celebrates the landscape in photographs
and writing. Erv Schroeder’s photographs bear witness to the primordial forces of the
earth—the raw power that moved and shifted huge hunks of rock to form natural stone
sculptures. Schroeder’s prints engage the viewer on an intimate level, acting as portals to
contemplative worlds, inviting the viewer on an inner journey. As further guides to the
landscape and its significance, he has invited indigenous writers—Natanya Ann Pulley,
Rainy Dawn, Esther G. Belin, Orlando White, and Tacey M. Atsitty—to contribute poems
that speak about these places. Celebrated Acoma storyteller Simon J. Ortiz introduces the
photography and poetry with his musings on stone. In addition, an essay by geologist
Marcia Bjornerud explores the geology of the region.
November
112 pp.
8.5 × 8.75
62 duotones, 1 chart
Also of Interest
$34.95 cloth
New Mexico’s High Peaks
A Photographic Celebration
ISBN 978-0-8263-5486-0
Mike Butterfield
$43.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5488-4
$39.95 cloth 978-0-8263-5440-2
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
25
photography
•
american west
• u.s.
history
Railroad Empire across the Heartland
Rephotographing Alexander Gardner’s Westward Journey
james e. sherow; photographs by john r. charlton
Best known for his Civil War photographs, Alexander Gardner also documented the construction of the Union Pacific Railway, Eastern Division (later the Kansas Pacific Railroad),
across Kansas beginning in 1867. This book presents recent photographs by John R. Charlton of the scenes Gardner recorded, paired with the Gardner originals and accompanied by
James E. Sherow’s discussion. Like most rephotography projects, this one provides fascinating information about the changes in the landscape over the last century and a half.
The book presents ninety pairs of Gardner’s and Charlton’s photographs. In all of Charlton’s photos he duplicates the exact location and time of day of the Gardner originals. Sherow uses the paired images to show how Indian and Anglo-American land-use practices
affected the landscape. As the Union Pacific claimed, the railroad created an American empire in the region, and Charlton’s rephotography captures the transformation of the grasslands, harnessed by the powerful social and economic forces of the railroad.
October
224 pp.
9 × 10
126 color plates, 33 halftones,
7 maps
$34.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5509-6
$43.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5510-2
26
Also of Interest
Meaningful Places
Landscape Photographers in the
Nineteenth-Century American West
Rachel McLean Sailor
$45.00s cloth 978-0-8263-5422-8
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
“A fascinating re-look at Kansas and the grasslands, viewed not only through the
camera lens but also through the less tangible, yet still revealing, historical lenses of
technology, conquest, environmental change, and time.”
—julie courtwright, author of prairie fire: a great plains history
james e. sherow is a professor of history at Kansas State University. A specialist in the environmental history of the American West, he is the author of The Grasslands of the United States:
An Environmental History and Watering the Valley: Development along the High Plains Arkansas
River, 1870–1950. He is also the editor of A Sense of the American West: An Environmental History
Anthology (UNM Press).
john r. charlton was for many years a photographer with the Kansas Geological Survey
at the University of Kansas. He provided the rephotographs for Donald L. Baars’s The Canyon
Revisited: A Rephotography of the Grand Canyon, 1923/1991.
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
27
photography
•
new mexico
paul o’connor studied photography at Pasadena
Art Center before moving to Taos in 1989, where
he earned his living by photographing art. Taos Portraits: Photos by Paul O’Connor is his tribute to the
art community.
Taos Portraits
Photos by Paul O’Connor
paul o’connor; edited by bill whaley
The photographs in Taos Portraits capture sixty subjects in black and white. Among
others, Larry Bell, Bob Ellis, Gus Foster, Dennis Hopper, Ken Price, Tony Reyna, Mark
Romero, Dean Stockwell, Maye Torres, and Carmen Velarde represent O’Connor’s
cross-cultural and cross-generational reminiscence of the Taos art community. Editor Bill
Whaley worked with the writers to record their impressions in short narratives, which the
Taos News called “funny, poignant, and revealing anecdotes.”
“Since the late nineteenth century, Taos, New Mexico, has beckoned all kinds
of artists, from Edward S. Curtis to Georgia O’Keeffe to Agnes Martin. When
photographer Paul O’Connor first arrived there in 1989, he decided to photograph
the last of the group known as the Taos Moderns—Bea Mandelman, Earl Stroh,
and Cliff and Barbara Harmon.” —ann landi, contributing editor of artnews
April 2014
144 pp.
12 × 15
62 halftones
Also of Interest
$100.00 cloth
Roadcut
The Architecture of Antoine Predock
ISBN 978-0-9840319-0-0
Christopher Curtis Mead
$125.00 CAD
Hondo Mesa Press
$75.00s cloth 978-0-8263-5009-1
28
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
photography
stuart ashman is the president
and CEO of the Museum of Latin
American Art (MOLAA). He is the
former curator and director for the
New Mexico Museum of Art and
the former secretary of cultural affairs
for the state of New Mexico.
Manuel Carrillo
Mi Querido México
stuart ashman
The photographic output of Manuel Carrillo is not as well-known as the work of Manuel
Alvarez Bravo and Edward Weston, his contemporaries in Mexico and the United States
respectively, but his stature as a master of traditional (now classical) photography is unquestionable. His beautifully crafted gelatin silver prints are testimony to a master image
maker who approaches his subject with awe-inspiring wonder.
In Mi Querido México Manuel Carrillo shows his love for his native country, its people,
landscape, churches, architecture, and even its animals. He shows the strength, beauty,
and dignity of the Mexican people. In his work we see the cycle of life and convincing
expressions covering a broad spectrum of the emotions and feelings that make up the
human condition. This publication will undoubtedly expand the knowledge and appreciation of Manuel Carrillo’s work and his beloved Mexico.
June
60 pp.
12.75 × 10.5
25 halftones
$45.00 cloth
ISBN 978-1-934491-43-0
$56.00 CAD
FrescoBooks / SF Design, llc
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Photography New Mexico
Thomas Barrow & Kristin
Barendsen; with essays by
Stuart Ashman
$95.00 cloth 978-1-934491-10-2
univer sity of new mexico press
29
art
josef diaz is the curator of the Southwest and
Mexican Colonial Art and History Collections at
the New Mexico History Museum. He is the author
and editor of The Art and Legacy of Bernardo Miera
y Pacheco: New Spain’s Explorer, Cartographer, and
Artist.
suzanne stratton-pruitt is an independent
art historian. She is the author and editor of the
catalogue for the exhibition The Virgin, Saints, and
Angels: South American Paintings 1600–1825 from
the Thoma Collection, and she is the editor of The
Art of Painting in Colonial Quito/El arte de la pintura
en Quito colonial.
Painting the Divine
Images of Mary in the New World
josef diaz & suzanne stratton-pruitt
Painting the Divine explores New World images of the Virgin Mary that portray some of
the events in her life, as well as examples of apparitions unique to various locales in the
Americas. Iconography seen in these artworks tells a story that mixes religion, culture,
and geography in ways unique to their regions. In addition, it examines pieces produced
by New Mexican artists who developed a unique hybrid style with Spanish colonists,
though they were separated by large geographic distances. It also explores the ways that
contemporary Hispanic artists have adapted and infused Marian imagery with their own
historical perspectives, stylistic traditions, and cultural values.
June
144 pp.
10 × 12
80 color plates
Also of Interest
$50.00 cloth
Conversations in Paint Language
The Art of Roseta Santiago
ISBN 978-1-934491-42-3
Bob Saar
$62.50 CAD
FrescoBooks / SF Design, llc
$75.00 cloth 978-1-934491-03-4
30
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
art
daniel sprick is an artist residing in Denver,
Colorado.
timothy j. standring is the Gates Foundation
Curator of Painting and Sculpture at the Denver
Art Museum.
Daniel Sprick’s Fictions
Recent Works
essay by timothy j. standring
This book, the first devoted entirely to Daniel Sprick’s work, accompanies a solo exhibition of recent work at the Denver Art Museum. In addition to full-page plates of nearly
fifty paintings, mostly portraits, the publication features an essay by Timothy J. Standring
that describes Sprick’s painting process in detail.
“Because he works in the vernacular of realism, viewers look for verisimilitude in
Daniel Sprick’s work, as if his paintings were a mirror of reality. The more we dwell
on his paintings, however, the more we become aware that they are anything but a
part of our world, and are, instead, poetic renditions of his own making.”
—Timothy j. Standring
June
64 pp.
9 × 12
49 color plates
$35.00 paper
ISBN 978-0-914738-97-8
$43.95 CAD
FrescoBooks / SF Design, llc
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Melinda Miles
Passages
Elizabeth Cook-Romero, Sarah
McCarty, Eric Thomson, & Monty
Phister
$65.00 cloth 978-1-934491-40-9
univer sity of new mexico press
31
art
deborah paris is an American landscape painter. Her
work has been exhibited by
the Laguna Art Museum,
the Albuquerque Museum
of Art, the Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, the
National Wildlife Museum,
and the Gilcrease Museum.
Deborah Paris
Lennox Woods—The Ancient Forest
elizabeth l. delaney, paula kornye tillman,
james eidson, & mary walker clark
“The intersection of fact and feeling is very important in my work. It drives my work in
general, and in particular for Lennox Woods,” explains Deborah Paris. Having spent the
past year physically and psychologically immersed in Texas’s northeast Lennox Woods,
the state’s only remaining old-growth forest, Paris has forged a deeply intimate relationship with her subject matter.
A veteran landscape painter and self-described artist-naturalist, Paris translates how
Lennox Woods looks and how it feels, re-creating its live, three-dimensional environment
on the two-dimensional picture plane. Through a convergence of literal observation and
soulfulness, the artist-naturalist conveys the true essence of her subject matter to evoke
the sublime. Thick with virgin timber and rare and endangered plant and animal species,
Lennox Woods exists as tangible history, an example of how the land looked before the
settlers arrived. This book represents the culmination of Deborah Paris’s eighteen-month
“residency” in the 375-acre Lennox Woods Preserve.
April 2014
64 pp.
12.2 × 9.5
35 color plates
Also of Interest
$30.00 paper
ISBN 978-1-934491-41-6
Texas Traditions
Contemporary Artists of the Lone
Star State
$37.50 CAD
FrescoBooks / SF Design, llc
Michael Duty & Susan Hallsten
McGarry
32
$85.00 cloth 978-1-934491-24-9
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
art
susan hallsten mcgarry was the editorin-chief of Southwest Art from 1979 to 1997
and is currently the director of the Plein-Air
Painters of America.
m. stephen doherty is an artist, the past
editor of American Artist, and the current editor of PleinAir magazine.
William Cather Hook
A Retrospective
susan hallsten mcgarry; foreword
by m. stephen doherty
For three decades the signature “W. C. Hook” has connoted dynamic design, saturated
color, and muscular brushwork. William Cather Hook’s ability to straddle the border between pictorial illusion and pure paint, between traditional yet modern, has won him
collectors worldwide. Less well-known about this master of acrylics is the breadth of his
subject matter. In this retrospective of paintings dating from the early 1980s to the present Hook guides the reader on a journey that includes the back roads of northern New
Mexico, the high country of the Colorado Rockies and Sangre de Cristos, California’s Pacific coastline and central valley, the reaches of the Sonoran Desert, and historic vistas in
England and Italy. Whether depicting crashing surf, aspen forests, or luminous big skies,
Hook’s vision is inviting, vibrant, and infused with radiant light. Also explored is the
artist’s biography, from his Kansas roots to his current studios in Santa Fe, New Mexico,
and Carmel, California.
September
240 pp.
12 × 12
160 color plates; 25 color
photographs
$75.00 cloth
ISBN 978-1-934491-45-4
$95.00 CAD
FrescoBooks / SF Design, llc
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Art of the National Parks
Historic Connections, Contemporary
Interpretations
Susan Hallsten McGarry, Jean
Stern, & Terry Lawson Dunn
$85.00 cloth 978-1-934491-39-3
univer sity of new mexico press
33
art
•
photography
2015 Enchanting New Mexico Calendar
Destinations of Distinction
photographs and travel ideas by laurence parent
Take a wondrous journey through the state of
New Mexico via color-drenched photographs from
native-born artist Laurence Parent. A freelance
photographer, Parent captures the Land of Enchantment at various nationally recognized compass points across the state.
June
10 × 12
$13.95 wall calendar
laurence parent is a full-time freelance photographer and
writer specializing in landscape, travel, and nature.
ISBN 978-1-934480-14-4
$17.50 cad
New Mexico Magazine
2015 New Mexico Artist Calendar
Robert Highsmith’s Views in Watercolor
robert highsmith
You’re invited to spend a spectacular year in the
awe-inspiring state of New Mexico—expertly
rendered in watercolor by artist Robert Highsmith.
Desert landscapes and canyons of the Southwest are
Highsmith’s favorite subjects—clearly evident in
his depictions of New Mexico.
June
February
216
10 ×pp.
12
5.5 x 8.5
$13.95 wall calendar
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-1-934480-15-1
978-0-8263-5436-5
$17.50
$22.95cad
CAD
New
Mexico
Magazine
e-ISBN
978-0-8263-5437-2
34
robert highsmith is a recent recipient of the New Mexico
Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts. He is a signature
member of both the New Mexico Watercolor Society and the
American Watercolor Society.
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
e d u c at i o n
•
southwest
dora calott wang is an assistant professor and a
historian for the University of New Mexico School of
Medicine. She is the author of The Kitchen Shrink: A
Psychiatrist’s Reflection on Healing in a Changing World.
shannan l. carter began working at the University
of New Mexico Medical Center in 1981. From 2002 until
she retired in 2010 she worked as a special assistant
to the dean of the University of New Mexico School of
Medicine.
The Daily Practice of Compassion
A History of the University of New Mexico School of
Medicine, Its People, and Its Mission, 1964–2014
dora calott wang; with shannan l. carter
Published in honor of the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the University of New
Mexico School of Medicine, this book provides more than an institutional history. Rich
with anecdotes and personality, Dora Calott Wang’s account is a must-read for anyone
curious about health care in New Mexico.
Celebrated for its innovations in medical curricula, UNM’s medical school began as
an audacious experiment by pioneering educators who were determined to create a great
medical school in a state beset by endemic poverty and daunting geographic barriers.
Wang traces the enactment of the school’s mission to provide medical education for New
Mexicans and to help alleviate the severe shortage of medical care throughout the state.
The Daily Practice of Compassion offers a primer for policy makers in medical education
and health-care delivery throughout the country.
December
February
216
336 pp.
pp.
5.5×x128.5
9
312 color
$19.95
paper
illustrations
978-0-8263-5436-5
$39.95 cloth
$22.95
CAD
ISBN
978-0-8263-5525-6
e-ISBN 978-0-8263-5437-2
$49.95 cad
e-isbn 978-0-8263-5526-3
UNM School of Medicine
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Modern Medicine in New Mexico
The State Medical Society from 1949
to 2009
Michael Joe Dupont
$40.00s paper 978-1-4507-6441-4
univer sity of new mexico press
35
Across the Great Divide
Anasazi America
A Photo Chronicle of the
Counterculture
Seventeen Centuries on the
Road from Center Place
Roberta Price
$34.95 cloth
Second Edition
David E. Stuart
$27.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-4957-6
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4959-0
Journals and Letters of John
Vance Lauderdale, 1864–1890
Edited and Annotated by
Robert M. Utley
$29.95 cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5453-2
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5455-6
The Border Is Burning
Children of Time
Come Up and Get Me
Ito Romo
$21.95 cloth
Evolution and the Human Story
An Autobiography of Colonel
Joe Kittinger
ISBN 978-0-8263-5334-4
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5335-1
36
ISBN 978-0-8263-5478-5
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5479-2
An Army Doctor on the
Western Frontier
Anne H. Weaver; Illustrated
by Matt Celeskey
$24.95 cloth
Joe Kittinger & Craig Ryan
$21.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-4442-7
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4444-1
ISBN 978-0-8263-4804-3
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4805-0
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
selected tr ade backlist
The Deportation of
Wopper Barraza
A Novel
Maceo Montoya
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5436-5
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5437-2
Hard Grass
Life on the Crazy Woman Bison
Ranch
Mary Zeiss Stange
$27.95 cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-4613-1
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4615-5
800–249–7737
Gila
A Growing Season
The Life and Death of an
American River
Sue Boggio & Mare Pearl
$18.95 paper
Updated and Expanded
Edition
Gregory McNamee
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5224-8
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5225-5
ISBN 978-0-8263-5247-7
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5248-4
Inside the New Mexico
Senate
Boots, Suits, and Citizens
Dede Feldman
$24.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5438-9
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5439-6
univer sity of new mexico press
La Llorona
The Crying Woman
Rudolfo Anaya; Illustrated
by Amy Córdova;
Translated by Enrique R.
Lamadrid
$19.95 cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-4460-1
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4462-5
37
Landscape Dreams,
A New Mexico Portrait
Craig Varjabedian
$50.00 cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-4879-1
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4881-4
New Mexico’s Reptiles
and Amphibians
A Field Guide
Leaving Tinkertown
Navajos Wear Nikes
Tanya Ward Goodman
$19.95 paper
A Reservation Life
ISBN 978-0-8263-5366-5
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5367-2
Road to Nowhere and
Other New Stories from
the Southwest
R. D. Bartlett & Patricia P.
Bartlett
$24.95 paper
Edited by D. Seth Horton &
Brett Garcia Myhren
$24.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5207-1
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5208-8
ISBN 978-0-8263-5314-6
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5315-3
38
Jim Kristofic
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-4947-7
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4948-4
Sister Rabbit’s Tricks
Emmett “Shkeme” Garcia;
Illustrated by Victoria
Pringle
$18.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5268-2
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5269-9
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
selected tr ade backlist
The Soledad Crucifixion
Nancy Wood
$21.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5128-9
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5129-6
The Texas Rangers and
the Mexican Revolution
The Bloodiest Decade,
1910–1920
Charles H. Harris III
& Louis R. Sadler
$34.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-3484-8
That Every Man Be Armed
The Evolution of a
Constitutional Right
Revised and Updated
Edition
Stephen P. Halbrook
$27.95 paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5298-9
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5299-6
The Voyage of the Beetle
A Walk Around the Horizon
Wilderness
A Journey around the World with
Charles Darwin and the Search
for the Solution to the Mystery
of Mysteries, as Narrated
by Rosie, an Articulate Beetle
Discovering New Mexico’s
Mountains of the Four
Directions
Debra Bloomfield; Essay by
Terry Tempest Williams
$50.00 cloth
Tom Harmer
$24.95 paper
Anne H. Weaver;
Illustrated by George
Lawrence
$18.95 cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5364-1
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5365-8
ISBN 978-0-8263-5429-7
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5431-0
ISBN 978-0-8263-4304-8
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
39
February
216 pp.
5.5 x 8.5
$19.95 paper
978-0-8263-5436-5
$22.95 CAD
e-ISBN 978-0-8263-5437-2
40
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
scholarly
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
41
women
•
chicana and chicano
ana castillo is the author of the novels So Far From
God, Peel My Love Like an Onion, The Guardians, and Give
It to Me. In 2013 she received the Gloria E. Anzaldua
Award from the American Studies Association for her
essay “The Real and True Meaning of Our Lady of Guadalupe,” which appears as the afterword to this book.
Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award
from the Gustavus Myers Center for the
Study of Bigotry and Human Rights
Massacre of the Dreamers
Essays on Xicanisma
20th anniver sary updated edition
Ana Castillo; Foreword by Clarissa Pinkola Estés
This new edition of an immensely influential book gives voice to Mexic Amerindian
women silenced for hundreds of years by the dual censorship of being female and indigenous. Castillo replaced the term “Chicana feminism” with “Xicanisma” to include
mestiza women on both sides of the border. In history, myth, interviews, and ethnography
Castillo revisits her reflections on Chicana activism, spiritual practices, sexual attitudes,
artistic ideology, labor struggles, and education-related battles. Her book remains a compelling document, enhanced here with a new afterword that reexamines the significance
of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
“What I admire about this book is its insistent demand for justice.”
—Matthew Rothschild, The Progressive
December
248 pp.
6×9
$24.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5358-0
$30.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5359-7
42
Also of Interest
A Dolores Huerta Reader
Edited by Mario T. García
$29.95s paper 978-0-8263-4513-4
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
“Brilliant and powerfully written. . . . These essays are testimony
and proof of a . . . revolutionary consciousness signaling
change and real hope.”
—Ms. Magazine
“Massacre of the Dreamers will be a stimulating addition to ethnic
and women’s studies collections.”
—Booklist
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
43
“An important contribution to the study of American life writing and an invaluable
reassessment of the work of Richard Wright and Richard Rodriguez.”
—Robert J. Butler, coeditor of The Richard Wright Encyclopedia
44
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
literary criticism
•
african american studies
•
chicana and chicano
Michael Nieto Garcia is an assistant professor of literature at Clarkson University. His essays have appeared in various academic journals, as well as in the critical collections
Identifying with Freedom: Indonesia after Suharto and The Culture and Philosophy of Ridley Scott. He is currently at work on
Richard Rodriguez for the Contemporary Latino Writers and
Directors series.
Autobiography in Black and Brown
Ethnic Identity in Richard Wright and Richard Rodriguez
Michael Nieto Garcia
Richard Wright was the grandson of slaves, Richard Rodriguez the son of immigrants. One
black, the other brown, each author prominently displays his race in the title of his autobiography: Black Boy and Brown. Wright was a radical left winger, while Rodriguez is widely
viewed as a reactionary. Despite their differences, Michael Nieto Garcia points out, the two
share a preoccupation with issues of agency, class struggle, ethnic identity, the search for
community, and the quest for social justice. Garcia’s study, the first to compare these two
widely read writers, argues that ethnic autobiography reflects the complexity of ethnic identity, revealing a narrative self that is bound to a visible ethnicity yet is also protean and free.
These autobiographies, according to Garcia, exemplify the tensions and contradictions
inherent in identity. In their presentation of the self we see the rejection not only of essentialized notions of ethnic authenticity but also of any conception of an ethnic self that
is not also communally derived. The image reflected in the mirror of autobiography also
reminds us that consciousness itself is altered by our reading, and that the construction
of modern ethnicity is shaped to a considerable extent by print culture.
November
248 pp.
6×9
$45.00s cloth
Also of Interest
ISBN 978-0-8263-5527-0
Chicana Creativity and Criticism
New Frontiers in American Literature
$56.00 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5528-7
Edited by María Herrera-Sobek &
Helena María Viramontes
$27.95s paper 978-0-8263-1712-4
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
45
l i t e r at u r e
Christopher Middleton is the author or editor of more
than twenty books of poetry and prose, and he is an awardwinning translator of German literature. He is a professor
emeritus of German languages and literature at the University of Texas at Austin.
Recencies Series: Research and Recovery
in Twentieth-Century American Poetics
Loose Cannons
Selected Prose
Christopher Middleton; Foreword
by August Kleinzahler
These uncategorizable writings by a distinguished poet and translator are lively, erudite,
and creative. Like his poetry, Middleton’s prose pieces are alive with incongruity, collage,
and surprising juxtapositions. This extensive collection is the perfect addition to every
student’s, scholar’s, and avid reader’s bookshelf.
“These thirty-three prose inventions of Christopher Middleton constitute the fourth
pillar of an extraordinary literary oeuvre, the other three being his poetry, translations, and literary essays. Whatever one chooses to call these often astonishing
miniatures, they are certainly Middleton’s wildest, most accessible and entertaining
work, and they count as some of his very finest writing.”
— August Kleinzahler, Foreword
October
160 pp.
5.5 × 9.25
$21.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5519-5
$27.50 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5520-1
46
Also of Interest
Selected Poems of Gabriela Mistral
Translated by Ursula K. Le Guin
$29.95 paper 978-0-8263-2819-9
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
poetry
•
l i t e r at u r e
David Antin’s most recent book is Radical Coherency:
Selected Essays on Art and Literature, 1966 to 2005. He lives in
San Diego, California.
Stephen Fredman is a professor of English literature
and American studies at the University of Notre Dame. His
most recent book is Contextual Practice: Assemblage and the
Erotic in Postwar Poetry and Art.
Recencies Series: Research and Recovery
in Twentieth-Century American Poetics
How Long Is the Present
Selected Talk Poems of David Antin
Edited by Stephen Fredman
Poet, performance artist, and critic David Antin invented the “talk poem.” He insisted
that his poems be oral and created in front of a live audience, in a specific time and place,
with the transcription of the performance adjusted for print by presenting it not in prose
but in short units interrupted by white spaces to indicate verbal pauses with little or no
punctuation.
In this book editor Stephen Fredman provides critical introductions to a selection of
talk poems from Antin’s now out-of-print collections in conjunction with a new interview
with the author. As Fredman points out, Antin’s work is a form in conceptual writing that
has influenced a generation of experimental poets. His talk poems are essential for classroom and scholarly discussions about modernism, postmodernism, and poetry—offering
an opportunity to strengthen the tie between science and the humanities.
“One of the true originals among American poets.”
—San Diego Reader
December
392 pp.
6.125 × 9.25
$39.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5529-4
$49.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5530-0
Also of Interest
D’Arcy McNickle’s The Hungry
Generations
The Evolution of a Novel
Edited by Birgit Hans
$34.95s cloth 978-0-8263-3862-4
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
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western history
•
american studies
David M. Wrobel holds the Merrick Chair in Western
History at the University of Oklahoma. He is also the
author of The End of American Exceptionalism: Frontier
Anxiety from the Old West to the New Deal and Promised
Lands: Promotion, Memory, and the Creation of the American West.
NEW IN PAPER
Calvin P. Horn Lectures in
Western History and Culture
Global West, American Frontier
Travel, Empire, and Exceptionalism from
Manifest Destiny to the Great Depression
David M. Wrobel
Winner of the 2014 Western Heritage Award for Nonfiction
from the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum
This thoughtful examination of a century of travel writing about the American West
overturns a variety of popular and academic stereotypes. Looking at both European and
American travelers’ accounts of the West, from de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America to
William Least Heat-Moon’s Blue Highways, David M. Wrobel offers a counter narrative
to the nation’s romantic entanglement with its western past, and he suggests the importance of some long-overlooked authors. Although in recent decades western historians
have paid little attention to travel writing, Wrobel demonstrates that this genre in fact
offers an important and rich understanding of the American West.
October
328 pp.
6×9
52 halftones, 1 map
Also of Interest
$29.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-3081-9
Indian Country
Travels in the American Southwest,
1840–1935
$37.50 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5371-9
Martin Padget
48
$24.95s paper 978-0-8263-3029-1
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american indians
•
l aw
•
southwest
malcolm ebright is a historian, an attorney, and
the director of the Center for Land Grant Studies. His
most recent book, written in collaboration with Rick
Hendricks and Richard W. Hughes, is Four Square
Leagues: Pueblo Indian Land in New Mexico (UNM Press).
Advocates for the Oppressed
Hispanos, Indians, Genízaros, and Their Land in New Mexico
Malcolm Ebright
Struggles over land and water have determined much of New Mexico’s long history. The
outcome of such disputes, especially in colonial times, often depended on which party
had a strong advocate to argue a case before a local tribunal or on appeal. This book is
partly about the advocates who represented the parties to these disputes, but it is most of
all about the Hispanos, Indians, and Genízaros (Hispanicized nomadic Indians) themselves and the land they lived on and fought for.
Having written about Hispano land grants and Pueblo Indian grants separately, Malcolm Ebright now brings these narratives together for the first time, reconnecting them
and resurrecting lost histories. He emphasizes the success that advocates for Indians,
Genízaros, and Hispanos have had in achieving justice for marginalized people through
the return of lost lands and by reestablishing the right to use those lands for traditional
purposes.
November
440 pp.
6×9
12 drawings, 4 maps, 2 charts,
4 tables
$60.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5505-8
$75.00 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5506-5
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Four Square Leagues
Pueblo Indian Land in New Mexico
Malcolm Ebright, Rick Hendricks,
& Richard W. Hughes
$65.00s cloth 978-0-8263-5472-3
univer sity of new mexico press
49
american indians
• u.s.
history
•
politics
Thomas A. Britten is an associate professor of history
at the University of Texas at Brownsville. He is also the
author of The Lipan Apaches: People of Wind and Lightning
and American Indians in World War I: At War and at Home,
both available from UNM Press.
The National Council on
Indian Opportunity
Quiet Champion of Self-Determination
Thomas A. Britten
Largely forgotten today, the National Council on Indian Opportunity (1968–1974) was the
federal government’s establishment of self-determination as a way to move Indians into
the mainstream of American life. By endorsing the principle that Indians possessed the
right to make choices about their own lives, envision their own futures, and speak and
advocate for themselves, federal policy makers sought to ensure that Native Americans
possessed the same economic, political, and cultural opportunities afforded other Americans. In this book, the first study of the NCIO, historian Thomas A. Britten traces the
workings of the council along with its enduring impact on the lives of indigenous people.
September
352 pp.
6×9
23 halftones, 3 maps, 2 charts,
3 tables
$45.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5499-0
$56.00 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5500-3
50
Also of Interest
The Lipan Apaches
People of Wind and Lightning
Thomas A. Britten
$24.95 paper 978-0-8263-4587-5
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
history
•
new mexico
•
southwest
William W. Dunmire is a retired National Park Service
naturalist and is currently an associate in biology at the
University of New Mexico and a research associate at the
New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science.
NEW IN PAPER
New Mexico’s Spanish Livestock Heritage
Four Centuries of Animals, Land, and People
William W. Dunmire
This survey of the history of livestock in New Mexico is the first of its kind, going beyond
cowboy culture to examine the ways Spaniards, Indians, and Anglos used domestic
animals and how those uses affected the region’s landscapes and cultures. Dunmire
mines the observations of travelers and the work of earlier historians and other scholars
to provide a history of livestock in New Mexico from 1540 to the present. He includes
general background on animal domestication in the Old World and the New during preColumbian times, along with specific information on each of the six livestock species
brought to New Mexico by the early Spanish colonists.
“Weave[s] the interesting dynamics of cultural phenomena and peoples,
both native (Pueblo, Navajo, and Apache) and immigrant
(Spanish, Mexican, and Anglo), with land and livestock.”
—Choice
June
248 pp.
6×9
47 halftones, 2 maps, 2 tables
$27.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-3165-6
$34.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5091-6
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
No Settlement, No Conquest
A History of the Coronado Entrada
Richard Flint
$29.95 paper 978-0-8263-4363-5
univer sity of new mexico press
51
folklore
•
southwest
Don J. Usner’s most recent book, Valles Caldera: A
Vision for New Mexico’s National Preserve, coauthored
with William deBuys, also includes his remarkable photographs. He lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Querencias Series
Chasing Dichos through Chimayó
Don J. Usner
The poetic proverbs known to nuevomexicanos as dichos are particular to their places of
origin. In these reflections on the dichos of the Chimayó Valley in northern New Mexico
native son Don J. Usner has written a memoir that is also a valuable source of information on the rich language and culture of the region. Illustrated with black-and-white
photographs that Usner, who is also known for his photographic work, took of the people
and places that he writes about, this book is a one-of-a-kind introduction to the real New
Mexico.
Usner has known Chimayó since he was a boy visiting his grandmother and the other
village elders, who taught him genealogies going back to family origins in Spain. The
Spanish he learned there was embedded in dichos and cuentos. This book is the result of
Usner’s research into these memorable sayings, and it preserves a language and a culture
on the verge on dissolution. It is a gateway into a uniquely New Mexican way of life.
November
224 pp.
6×9
38 halftones
$39.95s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5523-2
$49.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5524-9
52
Also of Interest
Mayordomo
Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern
New Mexico
Stanley Crawford
$19.95 paper 978-0-8263-1445-1
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
history
•
l at i n a m e r i c a
Steven B. Bunker is an associate professor of history
at the University of Alabama.
“An important first study of modern
consumer society in Porfirian Mexico.”
—The Americas
NEW IN PAPER
Creating Mexican Consumer Culture
in the Age of Porfirio Díaz
Steven B. Bunker
Winner of the 2013 Thomas McGann Award from the Rocky Mountain
Council for Latin American Studies and the 2013 Humanities Book Award
from the Mexico Section of the Latin American Studies Association
In Creating Mexican Consumer Culture in the Age of Porfirio Díaz, Steven B. Bunker surveys
institutions and discourses of consumption in Porfirian Mexico—including the European,
especially French, influences of the time. He explores how individuals and groups used the
goods, practices, and spaces of urban consumer culture to construct meaning and identities
in a rapidly evolving social and physical landscape. Through case studies of tobacco marketing, department stores, advertising, shoplifting, and a famous jewelry robbery and homicide, Bunker provides a colorful walking tour of daily life in Mexico City. Emphasizing the
widespread participation in this consumer culture, Bunker’s work overturns conventional
wisdom that only the middle and upper classes participated in this culture.
July
352 pp.
6×9
20 halftones, 2 tables
$29.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-4455-7
$37.50 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4456-4
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Tools of Progress
A German Merchant Family in
Mexico City, 1865–Present
Jürgen Buchenau
$35.00s paper 978-0-8263-3088-8
univer sity of new mexico press
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history
•
l at i n a m e r i c a
•
gender studies
Edward Wright-Rios is an associate professor of history at Vanderbilt University. He is also the author of
Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism: Reform and Revelation in Oaxaca, 1887–1934.
Diálogos Series
Searching for Madre Matiana
Prophecy and Popular Culture in Modern Mexico
Edward Wright-Rios
In the mid-nineteenth century prophetic visions attributed to a woman named Madre
Matiana roiled Mexican society. Pamphlets of the time proclaimed that decades earlier
a humble laywoman foresaw the nation’s calamitous destiny—foreign invasion, widespread misery, and chronic civil strife. The revelations, however, pinpointed the cause
of Mexico’s struggles: God was punishing the nation for embracing blasphemous secularism. Responses ranged from pious alarm to incredulous scorn. Although most likely
a fiction cooked up amid the era’s culture wars, Madre Matiana’s persona nevertheless
endured. In fact, her predictions remained influential well into the twentieth century
as society debated the nature of popular culture, the crux of modern nationhood, and
the role of women, especially religious women. Here Edward Wright-Rios examines this
much-maligned—and sometimes celebrated—character and her position in the development of a nation.
December
392 pp.
6×9
33 halftones, 1 map
$34.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-4659-9
$43.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4660-5
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Christians, Blasphemers, and
Witches
Afro-Mexican Ritual Practice in the
Seventeenth Century
Joan Cameron Bristol
$29.95s paper 978-0-8263-3799-3
univer sity of new mexico press
55
history
•
l at i n a m e r i c a
•
women
Elaine Carey chairs the Department of History at St.
John’s University in New York City. She is also the author of Plaza of Sacrifices: Gender, Power, and Terror in
1968 Mexico (UNM Press).
Diálogos Series
Women Drug Traffickers
Mules, Bosses, and Organized Crime
Elaine Carey
In the flow of drugs to the United States from Latin America, women have always played
key roles as bosses, business partners, money launderers, confidantes, and couriers—
work rarely acknowledged. Elaine Carey’s study of women in the drug trade offers a new
understanding of this intriguing subject, from women drug smugglers in the early twentieth century to the cartel queens who make news today. Using international diplomatic
documents, trial transcripts, medical and public welfare studies, correspondence between
drug czars, and prison and hospital records, the author’s research shows that history can
be as gripping as a thriller.
“The first full-length study of female drug traffickers. The lives of these women
are fascinating and skillfully analyzed by the author. The book will be pleasurable
reading to general readers and specialists alike.”
—Howard Campbell, author of Drug War Zone: Frontline
Dispatches from the Streets of El Paso and Juárez
November
296 pp.
6×9
22 halftones
$29.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5198-2
$37.50 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5199-9
56
Also of Interest
Antonio’s Gun and Delfino’s
Dream
True Tales of Mexican Migration
Sam Quinones
$24.95 cloth 978-0-8263-4254-6
$19.95 paper 978-0-8263-4255-3
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
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history
•
l at i n a m e r i c a
•
africa
Russell Lohse is an assistant professor of history at
Pennsylvania State University.
Diálogos Series
Africans into Creoles
Slavery, Ethnicity, and Identity in Colonial Costa Rica
Russell Lohse
Unlike most books on slavery in the Americas, this social history of Africans and their
enslaved descendants in colonial Costa Rica recounts the journey of specific people from
West Africa to the New World. Tracing the experiences of Africans on two Danish slave
ships that arrived in Costa Rica in 1710, the Christianus Quintus and Fredericus Quartus, the
author examines slavery in Costa Rica from 1600 to 1750. Lohse looks at the ethnic origins
of the Africans and narrates their capture and transport to the coast, their embarkation
and passage, and finally their acculturation to slavery and their lives as slaves in Costa
Rica. Following the experiences of girls and boys, women and men, he shows how the
conditions of slavery in a unique local setting determined the constraints that slaves faced
and how they responded to their condition.
September
368 pp.
6×9
8 maps, 1 chart, 20 tables
Also of Interest
$34.95s paper
From Slavery to Freedom in Brazil
Bahia, 1835–1900
ISBN 978-0-8263-5497-6
Dale Torston Graden
$43.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5498-3
$29.95s paper 978-0-8263-4051-1
58
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
african american studies
•
religion
•
anthropology
Tracey E. Hucks is the chair of the Department of
Religion at Haverford College. Her scholarly interests
are in the historical development of African-descended
populations and their religious traditions in the Americas and the Caribbean.
NEW IN PAPER
Religions of the Americas Series
Yoruba Traditions and African
American Religious Nationalism
Tracey E. Hucks; Foreword by Charles H. Long
Exploring the Yoruba tradition in the United States, Hucks begins with the story of Nana
Oseijeman Adefunmi’s personal search for identity and meaning as a young man in Detroit
in the 1930s and 1940s. She traces his development as an artist, religious leader, and founder
of several African-influenced religio-cultural projects in Harlem and later in the South.
Adefunmi and other African Americans renamed themselves “Yorubas” and engaged in
the task of transforming Cuban Santería into a new religious expression that satisfied their
racial and nationalist leanings and eventually helped to place African Americans on a global
religious schema alongside other Yoruba practitioners in Africa and the diaspora.
“Religious historian Hucks offers an impressively thorough ethnographic
study of how Yoruba traditions came to be performed and reimagined by
African Americans in the twentieth century.”
—Choice
March 2014
472 pp.
6×9
32 halftones
$39.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5076-3
$49.95 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5077-0
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Sacred Spaces and Religious
Traditions in Oriente Cuba
Jualynne E. Dodson
$45.00s cloth 978-0-8263-4353-6
univer sity of new mexico press
59
anthropology
•
l at i n a m e r i c a
•
religion
Lindsey King is an assistant professor of anthropology
at East Tennessee State University.
Spiritual Currency in Northeast Brazil
Lindsey King
This book examines the spiritual community of the followers of St. Francis of Wounds in
the town of Canindé in northeast Brazil. Their tradition involves pilgrimage and the practice of crafting unique offerings in payment for healing and reversal of bad fortune—a
practice predating Christianity and brought to the new world by explorers and early European colonial powers. King argues that these marginalized Brazilians, living in a region
where poverty is endemic, use St. Francis of Wounds to replace the medical and social
services that the government has failed to provide. She further illustrates the evolution of
the regional practice with photographs documenting all stages of this tradition, especially
the folk art ex-votos used to pay for the saint’s intervention.
December
168 pp.
6×9
48 halftones, 1 map
$55.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5531-7
$70.00 CAD
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5532-4
60
Also of Interest
The City of Women
Ruth Landes
$27.95s paper 978-0-8263-1556-4
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
a r c h a e ol o g y
•
anthropology
Maxwell Museum of Anthropology
Anthropological Papers No. 9
Astronomy and Ceremony in the
Prehistoric Southwest: Revisited
Collaborations in Cultural Astronomy
Edited by Gregory E. Munson, Todd W. Bostwick,
and Tony Hull
For millennia humans around the world have observed and interacted with the sky, watching and marking the seasonal movements of the sun, moon, planets, and stars. Several
historic and contemporary Native American groups in the Southwest employ astronomical observations to guide their ceremonial and subsistence calendars, and over the past
several decades it has become clear that such practices extend well into the past. This
volume contains selected papers from the 2011 Conference on Archaeoastronomy in the
American Southwest, held at the University of New Mexico. These papers have as their
focus cultural astronomy—the archeological investigation of past astronomical practices
as well as the study of oral history and tradition of recent and continuing astronomical
practices—within the region.
May 2014
187 pp.
8.5 × 11
102 photos, 15 maps, 32 drawings, 6 tables
$30.00s paper
ISBN 978-0-912535-13-5
$37.50 CAD
Also of Interest
The Fetish Carvers of Zuni
Revised edition
Marian E. Rodee & James Ostler
$18.95 paper 978-0-912535-10-4
Maxwell Museum of Anthropology
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
61
anthropology
•
archaeology
John K. Papadopoulos is a professor of archae­
ology and classics and the chair of the Archaeology
Interdepartmental Program at UCLA.
Sarah P. Morris is the Steinmetz Professor of Classical Archaeology and Material Culture at UCLA.
Lorenc Bejko is an associate professor of archaeology and cultural-heritage management at the University of Tirana.
Lynne A. Schepartz is a professor of health sciences
and the head of the Biological Anthropology Division,
School of Anatomical Sciences, at the University of
Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.
Monumenta Archaeologica 34
The Excavation of the Prehistoric Burial
Tumulus at Lofkënd, Albania
Edited by John K. Papadopoulos, Sarah P. Morris,
Lorenc Bejko, & Lynne A. Schepartz
The burial tumulus of Lofkënd lies in one of the richest archaeological areas of Albania
(ancient “Illyria”), home to a number of burial tumuli spanning the Bronze and Iron Ages
of later prehistory. Some were robbed long ago, others were reused for modern burials;
few were excavated under scientific conditions. Modern understanding of the pre- and
protohistory of Illyria has largely been shaped by the contents of such burial mounds.
What inspired the systematic exploration of Lofkënd by UCLA was more than the promise of an unplundered necropolis; it was also a chance to revisit the significance of this
tumulus and its fellows for the emergence of urbanism and complexity in ancient Illyria.
In addition to artifacts, the recovery of surviving plant remains, bones, and other organic
material contribute insights into the environmental and ecological history of the region.
September
2 vols., 1330 pp.
8.5 × 11
773 color photographs and black
and white figures, 68 tables
$169.00s cloth
ISBN 978-1-938770-00-5
$212.50 CAD
The Cotsen Institute of
Archaeology Press
62
Also of Interest
Light and Shadow
Isolation and Interaction in the
Shala Valley of Northern Albania
Edited by Michael L. Galaty,
Ols Lafe, Wayne E. Lee,
& Zamir Tafilica
$65.00s cloth 978-1-931745-71-0
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
anthropology
•
archaeology
•
history
Thomas E. Levy is a distinguished professor in the
Department of Anthropology and directs the Levantine and cyber-archaeology laboratories at the University of California, San Diego. He is a member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Mohammad Najjar is a lecturer in Near Eastern
archaeology at Amman University, Jordan, and an aca­
demic and curatorial adviser for the Museum With No
Frontiers.
Erez Ben-Yosef is a lecturer in the Department of
Archaeology and Ancient Near Eastern Cultures and
the head of the Levantine Archaeometallurgy Laboratory at Tel Aviv University.
Monumenta Archaeologica 35
New Insights into the Iron Age
Archaeology of Edom, Southern Jordan
Edited by Thomas E. Levy, Mohammad Najjar,
& Erez Ben-Yosef
Situated south of the Dead Sea, near the famous Nabatean capital of Petra, the Faynan region in
Jordan contains the largest deposits of copper ore in the southern Levant. The Edom Lowlands
Regional Archaeology Project (ELRAP) takes an anthropological-archaeology approach to the
deep-time study of culture change in one of the Old World’s most important locales for studying
technological development. Using innovative digital tools for data recording, curation, analyses,
and dissemination, the researchers focused on ancient mining and metallurgy as the subject
of surveys and excavations related to the Iron Age (ca. 1200–500 BCE), when the first local,
historical state-level societies appeared in this part of the eastern Mediterranean basin. This
comprehensive and important volume challenges the current scholarly consensus concerning
the emergence and historicity of the Iron Age polity of biblical Edom and some of its neighbors,
such as ancient Israel.
September
2 vols., 1000 pp., 8.5 × 11
879 color photographs and
black and white figures, 72
tables, with DVD
$169.00s cloth
ISBN 978-1-931745-99-4
$212.50 CAD
The Cotsen Institute of
Archaeology Press
800–249–7737
Also of Interest
Last House on the Hill
BACH Area Reports from
Çatalhöyük, Turkey
Edited by Ruth Tringham
& Mirjana Stevanović
$76.00s cloth 978-1-931745-66-6
univer sity of new mexico press
63
Amiri Baraka and
Edward Dorn
The Collected Letters
Edited by Claudia Moreno
Pisano
$59.95s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5391-7
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5392-4
Brown-Eyed Children
of the Sun
Lessons from the Chicano
Movement, 1965–1975
George Mariscal
$29.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-3805-1
64
The Architecture of Change
Building a Better World
Edited by Jerilou Hammett
& Maggie Wrigley
$49.95s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5385-6
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5386-3
An Atlas of Historic New
Mexico Maps, 1550–1941
Peter L. Eidenbach
$60.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5229-3
Cables, Crises, and the Press
Clovis Caches
The Geopolitics of the New
International Information
System in the Americas,
1866–1903
Recent Discoveries and New
Research
John A. Britton
$60.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5397-9
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5398-6
Edited by Bruce B. Huckell
& J. David Kilby
$75.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5482-2
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5483-9
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
selected scholarly backlist
The Course of Andean
History
Edmund G. Ross
For God and Revolution
Soldier, Senator, Abolitionist
Peter V. N. Henderson
$34.95s paper
Richard A. Ruddy
$39.95s cloth
Priest, Peasant, and
Agrarian Socialism in the
Mexican Huasteca
ISBN 978-0-8263-5336-8
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5337-5
ISBN 978-0-8263-5374-0
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5375-7
Mark Saad Saka
$50.00s cloth
Frontier Cavalry Trooper
Frontier Naturalist
The Letters of Private Eddie
Matthews, 1869–1874
Jean Louis Berlandier and the
Exploration of Northern
Mexico and Texas
Edited by Douglas C.
McChristian
$55.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5226-2
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5228-6
800–249–7737
ISBN 978-0-8263-5338-2
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5339-9
In the Shadow of
Billy the Kid
Susan McSween and the
Lincoln County War
Russell M. Lawson
$45.00s cloth
Kathleen P. Chamberlain
$27.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5217-0
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5219-4
ISBN 978-0-8263-5279-8
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5280-4
univer sity of new mexico press
65
Inka Human Sacrifice and
Mountain Worship
Strategies for Empire
Unification
Thomas Besom
$65.00s cloth
Jesuit Student Groups, the
Universidad Iberoamericana,
and Political Resistance in
Mexico, 1913–1979
David Espinosa
$55.00s cloth
John Gaw Meem at Acoma
The Restoration of San Esteban
del Rey Mission
Kate Wingert-Playdon
$40.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5209-5
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5211-8
ISBN 978-0-8263-5307-8
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5308-5
ISBN 978-0-8263-5460-0
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5461-7
Making Aztlán
Mayan Tales from
Chiapas, Mexico
Media Management in the
Age of Giants
Robert M. Laughlin;
with contributions by
Francisca Hernández
Hernández; Spanish translation by Socorro Gómez
Hernández & Juan Benito
de la Torre
$75.00s cloth
Business Dynamics of
Journalism
Ideology and Culture of the
Chicana and Chicano Movement, 1966–1977
Juan Gómez-Quiñones &
Irene Vásquez
$45.00s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5466-2
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5467-9
Second Edition
Dennis F. Herrick
$49.95s paper
ISBN 978-0-8263-5163-0
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5164-7
ISBN 978-0-8263-5448-8
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5449-5
66
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
selected scholarly backlist
Native Brazil
Beyond the Convert and the
Cannibal, 1500–1900
New Mexican Folk Music/
Cancionero del Folklor
Nuevomexicano
No Mere Shadows
Faces of Widowhood in Early
Colonial Mexico
Edited by Hal Langfur
$29.95s paper
Treasures of a People/El Tesoro
del Pueblo
Shirley Cushing Flint
$55.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-3841-9
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-3842-6
Cipriano Frederico Vigil;
with the Editorial Collaboration of David García
$45.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5311-5
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5312-2
ISBN 978-0-8263-4937-8
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4939-2
The Science of Soccer
Travelers to the Other World
A Bouncing Ball and a
Banana Kick
A Maya View of North America
The War Has Brought Peace
to Mexico
John Taylor
$34.95s cloth
Romin Teratol & Antzelmo
Péres
$34.95s cloth
World War II and the Consolidation of the Post-Revolutionary
State
ISBN 978-0-8263-5464-8
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5465-5
ISBN 978-0-8263-4888-3
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-4890-6
Halbert Jones
$55.00s cloth
ISBN 978-0-8263-5130-2
E-ISBN 978-0-8263-5132-6
800–249–7737
univer sity of new mexico press
67
2015 Enchanting New Mexico Calendar, 34
2015 New Mexico Artist Calendar, 34
Across the Great Divide, 36
Advocates for the Oppressed, 49
Africans into Creoles, 58
Amiri Baraka and Edward Dorn, 64
Anasazi America, 36
Anaya, Rudolfo, 37
The Architecture of Change, 64
Arellano, Juan Estevan, 10
An Army Doctor on the Western Frontier, 36
Ashman, Stuart, 29
An Atlas of Historic New Mexico Maps,
1550–1941, 64
Astronomy and Ceremony in the Prehistoric
Southwest: Revisited, 61
Autobiography in Black and Brown, 44–45
Averill, Thomas Fox, 13
Bartlett, Patricia P., 38
Bartlett, R. D., 38
Bejko, Lorenc, 62
Benito de la Torre, Juan, 67
Ben-Yosef, Erez, 63
Bergman, Denise, 21
Besom, Thomas, 66
Bjornerud, Marcia, 24–25
Bloomfield, Debra, 39
Boggio, Sue, 37
Bohm, Robert, 22
The Border Is Burning, 36
Bostwick, Todd W., 61
Britten, Thomas A., 50
Britton, John A., 64
Broken Promises, 17
Brown-Eyed Children of the Sun, 64
Bunker, Steven B., 53
Bush League Boys, 9
Cables, Crises, and the Press, 64
Carey, Elaine, 56–57
A Carol Dickens Christmas, 13
Carter, Shannan L., 35
Castillo, Ana, 42–43
Celeskey, Matt, 36
Chamberlain, Kathleen P., 65
Charlton, John R., 26–27
68
Chasing Dichos through Chimayó, 52
Children of Time, 36
Clark, Mary Walker, 32
Clovis Caches, 64
Come Up and Get Me, 36
Conjugal Bliss, 16
Contreras, Carlos, 20
Córdova, Amy, 37
The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press,
62–63
The Course of Andean History, 65
Creating Mexican Consumer Culture in the Age of
Porfirio Díaz, 53
The Daily Practice of Compassion, 35
Daniel Sprick’s Fictions, 31
Deborah Paris, 32
Delaney, Elizabeth L., 32
de la Torre, Juan Benito, 66
The Deportation of Wopper Barraza, 37
Diaz, Josef, 30
Dispatches from the Drownings, 23
Doherty, M. Stephen, 33
Dunmire, William W., 51
Ebright, Malcolm, 49
Edmund G. Ross, 65
Eidenbach, Peter L., 64
Eidson, James, 32
Enduring Acequias, 10
Espinosa, David, 66
Evans, Max, 4–5
The Excavation of the Prehistoric Burial
Tumulus at Lofkënd, Albania, 62
Feldman, Dede, 37
Flint, Shirley Cushing, 67
For God and Revolution, 65
Fredman, Stephen, 47
FrescoBooks / SF Design, llc, 29–33
Frontier Cavalry Trooper, 65
Frontier Naturalist, 65
García, David, 67
Garcia, Emmett “Shkeme,” 38
Garcia, Michael Nieto, 44–45
Gila, 37
Global West, American Frontier, 48
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
index
Goin’ Crazy with Sam Peckinpah and All
Our Friends, 4–5
Gómez-Quiñones, Juan, 66
Goodman, Tanya Ward, 38
A Growing Season, 37
Halbrook, Stephen P., 39
Hammett, Jerilou, 64
Hard Grass, 37
Harmer, Tom, 39
Harris, Charles R., III, 39
Harris, Michael T., 17
Henderson, Peter V. N., 65
Hernández, Francisca Hernández, 66
Hernández, Socorro Gómez, 66
Herrick, Dennis F., 66
Highsmith, Robert, 34
Hollars, B. J., 23
Hondo Mesa Press, 28
Horton, D. Seth, 38
How Long Is the Present, 47
Huckell, Bruce B., 64
Hucks, Tracey E., 59
Hull, Tony, 61
Inka Human Sacrifice and Mountain Worship, 66
Inside the New Mexico Senate, 37
In the Shadow of Billy the Kid, 65
Intimate Memories, 11
Jesuit Student Groups, the Universidad Iberoamericana, and Political Resistance in Mexico,
1913–1979, 66
John Gaw Meem at Acoma, 66
Jones, Halbert, 67
Kilby, J. David, 64
King, Lindsey, 60
Kittinger, Joe, 36
Kleinzahler, August, 46
Kristofic, Jim, 38
La Frontera Publishing, 17
La Llorona, 37
Lamadrid, Enrique R., 37
Landscape Dreams, A New Mexico Portrait, 38
Langfur, Hal, 67
Laughlin, Robert M., 66
800–249–7737
Lawrence, George, 39
Lawson, Russell, 65
Leaving Tinkertown, 38
Levy, Thomas E., 63
Lohse, Russell, 58
Long, Charles H., 59
Loose Cannons, 46
Luschei, Glenna, 18
Making Aztlán, 66
Manuel Carrillo, 29
Mariscal, George, 64
Massacre of the Dreamers, 42–43
Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, 61
Mayan Tales from Chiapas, Mexico, 66
McChristian, Douglas C., 65
McGarry, Susan Hallsten, 33
McKibben, Bill, 24–25
McNamee, Gregory, 37
Media Management in the Age of Giants, 66
The Memory of Stone, 24–25
Middleton, Christopher, 46
Montoya, Maceo, 37
Moreno Pisano, Claudia, 64
Morris, Sarah P., 62
Morton, Paula E., 6–7
Munson, Gregory E., 61
Myhren, Brett Garcia, 38
Mysterious New Mexico, 8
Najjar, Mohammad, 63
The National Council on Indian Opportunity, 50
Native Brazil, 67
Navajos Wear Nikes, 38
New Insights into the Iron Age Archaeology of
Edom, Southern Jordan, 63
New Mexican Folk Music/Cancionero del Folklor
Nuevomexicano, 67
New Mexico Magazine, 34
New Mexico’s Reptiles and Amphibians, 38
New Mexico’s Spanish Livestock Heritage, 51
Nichols, John, 16
No Mere Shadows, 67
Nott, Robert, 4–5
O’Connor, Paul, 28
Oles, Carole Simmons, 19
Ortiz, Simon J., 24–25
univer sity of new mexico press
69
Painting the Divine, 30
Papadopoulos, John K., 62
Parent, Laurence, 34
Pearl, Mare, 37
Péres, Antzelmo, 67
Pinkola Estés, Clarissa, 42–43
The Powwow Highway, 14
Price, Roberta, 36
Pringle, Victoria, 38
Time Served, 20
Tortillas, 6–7
Travelers to the Other World, 67
Usner, Don J., 52
Utley, Robert M., 36
Radford, Benjamin, 8
Railroad Empire across the Heartland, 26–27
Road to Nowhere and Other New Stories from the
Southwest, 38
Romo, Ito, 36
Ruddy, Richard A., 65
Rudnick, Lois Palken, 11
Ryan, Craig, 36
Sadler, Louis R., 39
Saka, Mark Saad, 65
Schepartz, Lynne A., 62
Schroeder, Erv, 24–25
The Science of Soccer, 67
Seals, David, 14–15
Searching for Madre Matiana, 54–55
A Selected History of Her Heart, 19
Selected Scholarly Backlist, 64–67
Selected Trade Backlist, 36–39
Sherow, James E., 26–27
Sister Rabbit’s Tricks, 38
The Sky Is Shooting Blue Arrows, 18
Smith, Toby, 9
The Soledad Crucifixion, 39
Sophie’s House of Cards, 12
Spiritual Currency in Northeast Brazil, 60
Stange, Mary Zeiss, 37
Strandring, Timothy J., 31
Stratton-Pruitt, Suzanne, 30
Stuart, David E., 36
Sweet Medicine, 15
Taos Portraits, 28
Taylor, John, 67
Teratol, Romin, 67
The Texas Rangers and the Mexican Revolution, 39
That Every Man Be Armed, 39
Tillman, Paula Kornye, 32
70
Varjabedian, Craig, 38
Vásquez, Irene, 66
Vigil, Cipriano Frederico, 67
The Voyage of the Beetle, 39
A Walk Around the Horizon, 39
Wang, Dora Calott, 35
The War Has Brought Peace to Mexico, 67
Warner, Sharon Oard, 12
Weaver, Anne H., 36, 39
West End Press, 20–22
Whaley, Bill, 28
What the Bird Tattoo Hides, 22
Wilderness, 39
William Cather Hook, 33
Williams, Terry Tempest, 39
Wingert-Playdon, Kate, 66
A Woman in Pieces Crossed a Sea, 21
Women Drug Traffickers, 56–57
Wood, Nancy, 39
Woodward, Noel, 18
Wright-Rios, Edward, 54–55
Wrigley, Maggie, 64
Wrobel, David M., 48
Yoruba Traditions and African American Religious
Nationalism, 59
Illustration credits
front cover: courtesy MGM Studios
inside front cover: courtesy Max Evans
pages 2–3: courtesy Max Evans
page 5: courtesy Garner Simmons
page 7: courtesy El Paso County Historical Society, El
Paso, Texas
page 24: courtesy Erv Schroeder
page 27: St. Louis, Missouri, Bird’s-eye (1873)
pages 40–41: courtesy NARA Photo Archive
page 43: courtesy Robert A. Molina
page 54: courtesy California State Library—Sutro Branch,
San Francisco, California
page 57: courtesy Fototeca Nacional del Instituto Nacional de
Anthropología e Historia (INAH), Pachuca, Hidalgo
univer sity of new mexico press800–249–7737
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