Marty Eberhardt, Silver City/Tucson mystery novelist, is a rare find. As in her premier outing for garden employee Bea Rivers, Eberhardt’s Bones in the Back Forty tells a sweet, sweet story. She offers a new genre of joyful suspense every time a reader cracks open one of her books. A mystery reader who plunges into […]
Gila Lost and Found: Search and Rescue in New Mexico by Marc Levesque Reviewed by JJ Amaworo Wilson Gila Lost and Found recounts the author’s experiences as a Search and Rescue (SAR) field coordinator in the Gila Wilderness. It’s part a “how to survive” and part an adventure book, although some parts read like entry […]
Within Our Grasp: Childhood Malnutrition Worldwide and the Revolution Taking Place to End It by Sharman Apt RussellPantheonApril 6, 2021ISBN-10: 1524747246 Reviewed by JJ Amaworo Wilson Humans have been hungry for a long time. The four-thousand-year-old tomb of Ankhtifi holds the inscription “All of Upper Egypt was dying of hunger to such a degree that […]
As 2020 comes to a close, the Southwest Word Fiesta committee highlights a few of the finest books we read this year. The Collector of Leftover Souls: Field Notes on Brazil’s Everyday Insurrections by Eliane Brum is a book of essays based on interviews with Brazil’s marginalized people. Among her interviewees are an 85-year-old hoarder, […]
The Time to Fight for New Mexico is Now.A Review of At the Precipice: New Mexico’s Changing Climate by Laura Paskus by Elaine Stachera Simon Correspondent and producer for the New Mexico PBS series “Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future,” Laura Paskus has been reporting on the environment since 2002. Her book […]
Perdido: Sierra San Luis by Michael P. Berman When the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V asked Mexico’s conqueror, Hernan Cortes, what Mexico looked like, Cortes crumpled a piece of parchment, threw it on the floor, and said, “Mexico.” Mountains, bluffs, peaks and ridges. Five-hundred years later, Michael Berman, longtime photographer/adventurer and teller of the tale […]
We respectfully acknowledge that the entirety of southwestern New Mexico is the traditional territory, since time immemorial, of the Chis-Nde, also known as the people of the Chiricahua Apache Nation. The Chiricahua Apache Nation is recognized as a sovereign Native Nation by the United States in the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Friendship of 1 July 1852 (10 Stat. 979) (Treaty of Santa Fe ratified 23 March 1853 and proclaimed by President Franklin Pierce 25 March 1853).