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2015 Enchanting The Goldilocks Zone Otherness Calendar Gale . . . 19 Alegría . . . 21 Parent . . . 23 Hispanic Folk Music of New Philmont 2015 New Mexico Artist Calendar Mexico and the Southwest Murphy . . . 33 Highsmith . . . 23 Robb . . . 43 The Politics of Giving in the Advances in Titicaca Basin Humans and Landscapes Viceroyalty of Rio de la Plata Archaeology—2 of Çatalhöyük Grieco . . . 51 Vranich & Levine . . . 60 Hodder . . . 64 A Prehistory of Western North The Allure of Turquoise, Second Imagining Geronimo America Edition Clements . . . 45 Shaul . . . 56 Vigil . . . 22 Inside the New Mexico Senate The Science of Soccer American Blood Feldman . . . 26–27 Taylor . . . 38–39 Nichols . . . 16 Integrating Çatalhöyük Substantive Technologies at Anasazi America Hodder . . . 65 Çatalhöyük Stuart . . . 30–31 A Jesuit Missionary in Eigh- Hodder . . . 65 Archaeology of the Chinese teenth-Century Sonora Visions of Tiwanaku Bronze Age Thompson . . . 52 Vranich & Stanish . . . 61 Campbell . . . 63 Jesuit Student Groups, the The War Has Brought Peace An Army Doctor on the Western Universidad Iberoamericana, to Mexico Frontier and Political Resistance in Jones . . . 54 Utley . . . 29 Mexico, 1913–1979 Wilderness Çatalhöyük 2000–2008 Research Espinosa . . . 53 Bloomfield & Williams . . . 4–7 Reports Volumes 7–10 Knowing History in Mexico Wings for My Flight Hodder . . . 65 Stack . . . 55 Houle . . . 12 Çatalhöyük Excavations Making Aztlán With a Book in Their Hands Hodder . . . 64 Gómez-Quiñones Martín-Rodríguez . . . 41 Chasing the Santa Fe Ring & Vásquez . . . 40 With Our Eyes Wide Open Caffey . . . 28 Maya Pilgrimage to Ritual Valentine . . . 21 Clovis Caches Landscapes Xylotheque Huckell & Kilby . . . 57 Palka . . . 46 Renfro . . . 11 Cormac McCarthy Mayan Tales from Chiapas, Lilley . . . 18 Mexico Laughlin . . . 47 The Cultural Dynamics of Shell-Matrix Sites Meaningful Places Roksandic, Mendonça de Souza, Sailor . . . 14 Eggers, Burchell, & Klokler . . . 58 Melinda Miles The Deportation of Wopper Romero, McCarty, Thomson, Barraza & Phister . . . 24–25 Montoya . . . 15 Mono Lake An Elegy for September Hoffman . . . 13 Nichols . . . 17 Native Brazil Emotions and Daily Life in Langfur . . . 48–49 Colonial Mexico New Mexican Folk Music/ Villa-Flores & Lipsett-Rivera . . . 50 Cancionero del Folklor Empires and Diversity Nuevomexicano Areshian . . . 59 Vigil . . . 42 Press Formative Lifeways in ’s High Peaks 1717 Roma NE Tlaxcala, Volume 1 Butterfield . . . 8–10 Albuquerque, NM 87106 Lesure . . . 62 No Settlement, No Conquest 505-277-3495 Four Square Leagues Flint . . . 32 Ebright, Hendricks, O’Keeffe & Hughes . . . 44 Merrill . . . 20 800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 1

(&12% PHOTOGRAPHY • ENVIRONMENT

Wilderness 2%3&1 34**-+#%42; essay by (%&&) (%-0%'( ,#44#1-'

Debra Bloomfield engaged for five years on a photographic project in the wilderness. After photographing the desert in Four Corners and the ocean in Still, she has moved on in this new book to the forest. Her photographs do not describe a particular place. She does not catalog the ele- ments that add up to wilderness. She does not show each detail she observed or convey all the information she learned while she was there. Instead, her photographs and soundscapes bring us to the experience of wilderness.

“Debra Bloomfield is creating a body of work for our eyes and ears that beckons us to experience our own wild hearts beating in harmony with the Tongass National Forest, now threatened.” —"#$$% "#&'#(" )*++*,&(

4 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 5 !# !"

A CD is an integral part of this book, allowing the reader to share the photographer’s journey of hearing the call of birds overhead, the crunch of snow underfoot, and the hum of a ferry’s engine. In Wilderness, two former UNM authors have joined in a collaboration that began over a cup of coffee and their mutual passion for wilderness.

2%3&1 34**-+#%42’' poetic large-scale color photographs are included in the collections of the New Mexico Museum of Art, the Phoenix Art Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the George Eastman House, and the Victoria and Albert Museum.

(%&&) (%-0%'( ,#44#1-', one of the nation’s leading environmental writers, is the author most recently of When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice. '-.". /$#0*": Louis Gakumba

6 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 January

128 pp. Also of Interest 10.3 x 12.3 55 color photos, 2 maps, Landscape Dreams, A New Mexico 1 audio CD Portrait $50.00 cloth Craig Varjabedian !"#$ 978-0-8263-5429-7 $50.00 cloth 978-0-8263-4879-1 $57.50 CAD e-*(12 978-0-8263-5431-0

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 7 New Mexico’s High Peaks A Photographic Celebration

-#5% 3!((%&+#%42; foreword by Robert Julyan

This book should be required reading for all who believe New Mexico is nothing but plains, mesas, and cacti. It proves in spectacular fashion that the Land of Enchant- ment is very much a mountain state, with at least sixty summits 12,000 feet or higher. Photographer-author Mike Butterfield has spent forty years hiking these high moun- tains, and his magnificent images are paired here with the chronicle of his adventures. To help readers become acquainted with his beloved mountains, Butterfield divides the high peaks of into their geographical regions, each with its unique geology, history, and plants and animals. Butterfield’s primary focus, however, remains on the peaks, which have attracted generations of hikers, backpackers, climbers, hunters, and horsemen. To assist those visitors, Butter- field covers not only named sum- mits but also the many individual points exceeding 12,000 feet. He in- cludes valuable information about important trails and trailheads, access points, and, for car-bound vis- itors, places from which the moun- tains can be most favorably viewed.

8 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 PHOTOGRAPHY • SOUTHWEST

%!&' #())'*+!',- is a professional photographer and the coauthor of Mike Butterfield’s Guide to the Mountains of New Mexico. He lives in Albuquerque.

“This book could only have been created by someone like Mike Butterfield, with a photographer’s eye for natural beauty coupled with a photographer’s appreciation for technical detail. It’s no accident that in another part of his life Mike is a jeweler, for the mountains Mike has presented for our delight and wonder are indeed New Mexico’s finest jewels.” —3.$#).$0, $.1#$" 45+%,2, ,5"-.$ .3 !"# $%&'!()'* %+ '#, $#-)..

“Not only does this fine book take one to the highest elevations in New Mexico, it also elevates one’s consciousness.” —4,/6 +.#33+#$, ,5"-.$ .3 *&/0)0(1 (1%'2 !"# .%'!)'#'!(1 3)0)3#: (' ('!"%1%24 %+ )'!#/0)#,*

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 9 May

192 pp. Also of Interest 11 x 8.5 134 color photos, 13 maps, A Walk Around the Horizon Mike Butterfield’s Guide to the 3 tables Discovering New Mexico’s Mountains of New Mexico $39.95 cloth Mountains of the Four Directions Peter Greene !"#$ 978-0-8263-5440-2 Tom Harmer $29.95 paper 978-0-937206-88-1 $45.95 CAD $24.95 paper 978-0-8263-5364-1 e-*(12 978-0-8263-5441-9

10 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 NATURE • MEMOIR

)%4#61$%(1 0. &%"+&* is also the author of the award- winning book of linked short stories A Catalogue of Everything in the World. She lives in Connecticut.

Xylotheque Essays )%4#61$%(1 0. &%"+&*

Trees are guiding symbols for Yelizaveta P. Renfro in her life and in her work. Com- bining memoir and nature writing, this book comprises nine essays that represent different seasons and slices of time, not unlike the rings of a tree. No two rings are alike, but each accretes to the next, creating, section by section, a life.

“In these profound and moving essays, Yelizaveta Renfro applies a scientist’s eye for detail. . . . Her inquiries into the themes of growth, death, and time evoke Annie Dillard and Edward Abbey.” —45("*2 (". 7#$&,*2, ,5"-.$ .3 *%' %+ ( 2&': ( $#$%)/

April 176 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 10 halftones $19.95 paper Hiking Alone Leaving Tinkertown !"#$ 978-0-8263-5458-7 Trails Out, Trails Home Tanya Ward Goodman $22.95 CAD Mary Beath $19.95 paper 978-0-8263-5366-5 e-*(12 978-0-8263-5459-4 $14.95 paper 978-0-8263-4329-1

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 11 NATURE • ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES • AMERICAN WEST

-1&/) /*((&%44 7*!4% is also the author of One City’s Wilderness: Portland’s Forest Park and The Prairie Keepers: Secrets of the Zumwalt. She lives in Portland, Oregon.

Wings for My Flight The Peregrine Falcons of Chimney Rock !021(%2 %2#(#*" -1&/) /*((&%44 7*!4% Winner of the Christopher Award

Forty years ago, the peregrine falcon was on the U.S. endangered species list and many doubted that it would survive. Marcy Houle was a young wildlife biologist observing one of the last remaining pairs—located at a site in southwest Colorado slated for de- velopment as a major tourist site. First published in 1991 and winner of several national awards, this book chronicles her work at Chimney Rock along with the recovery of the species. A new preface examines the last thirty years of the peregrine population and its remarkable comeback and culminates with President Barack Obama’s designation of Chimney Rock as a national monument.

February 216 pp. Also of Interest 5.25 x 8.25 18 halftones Raptors of New Mexico The Travails of Two Woodpeckers $24.95 paper Edited by Jean-Luc E. Cartron Ivory-Bills and Imperials !"#$ 978-0-8263-5434-1 David E. Brown, Noel F. R. $28.95 CAD $50.00 cloth 978-0-8263-4145-7 Snyder, and Kevin B. Clark e-*(12 978-0-8263-5435-8 $34.95s cloth 978-0-8263-4664-3

12 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 HISTORY • ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

13&171- 7*++-1" teaches history at Los Angeles Valley College.

Mono Lake From Dead Sea to Environmental Treasure 13&171- 7*++-1"

Mono Lake is one of the largest lakes in California, and Californians have been using it, enjoying it, and abusing it since nomadic northern Paiutes began hunting the lake’s vast bird populations. Controversy between environmentalists and the City of Los Angeles brought so much attention to Mono Lake in the late twentieth century that it became best known for its appearance on “Save Mono Lake” bumper stickers. This thoughtful study is the first book to explore the lake’s environmental and cultural history. Hoffman writes about gold mining in the Mono Basin; a failed oil boom; efforts to develop recreational activities such as a state-operated marina, which also failed; catastrophes including plane crashes and the testing of bombs underwater; and litiga- tion over the diversion of creeks flowing into the lake and the resulting decline in the lake level.

April 184 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 26 halftones, 2 maps Salt Dreams Saved in Time $34.95s cloth Land and Water in Low-Down The Fight to Establish Florissant Fossil !"#$ 978-0-8263-5444-0 California Beds National Monument, Colorado $40.50 CAD William deBuys and Joan Myers Estella B. Leopold and e-*(12 978-0-8263-5445-7 $29.95 paper 978-0-8263-2428-3 Herbert W. Meyer $24.95 paper 978-0-8263-5236-1

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 13 AMERICAN WEST • PHOTOGRAPHY

&1/7%4 -/4%1" '1#4*& is an assistant professor of art history at the University of Wyoming.

“Will change our understanding of the American quest for self-identity.” —'#"#$ 1,/.2 -,+#(, ,5"-.$ .3 *)10#/ .)!)#*: 5"%!%2/(5")'2 ($#/).(' &/6(')7(!)%', 1839–1939

Meaningful Places Landscape Photographers in the Nineteenth-Century American West &1/7%4 -/4%1" '1#4*&

The early history of photography in America coincided with the Euro-American settlement of the West. This thoughtful book argues that the rich history of western photography cannot be understood by focusing solely on the handful of well-known pho- tographers whose work has come to define the era. Art historian Rachel Sailor points out that most photographers in the West were engaged in producing images for their local communities. The book explores the cultural complexity of regional landscape photography, western places, and local sociopolitical concerns. Photographic imagery, like western paintings from the same era, enabled Euro-Americans to see the new landscape through their own cultural lenses, shaping the idea of the frontier for the people who lived there.

March 272 pp. 7 x 10 Also of Interest 106 halftones, 3 maps Silver Cities $45.00s cloth Photographing American !"#$ 978-0-8263-5422-8 Urbanization, 1839–1939, $51.95 CAD Revised & Expanded Edition e-*(12 978-0-8263-5423-5 Peter Bacon Hales $39.95s cloth 978-0-8263-3178-6

14 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 FICTION • CHICANA AND CHICANO

-1/%* -*"(*)1 is an assistant professor in the Chicana/o studies department at UC Davis and an affiliated faculty member of Taller Arte del Nuevo Amanecer (TANA), a community-based art center in Woodland, California.

The Deportation of Wopper Barraza A Novel -1/%* -*"(*)1

After Wopper Barraza’s fourth drunk driving violation, the judge orders his immediate deportation. “But I haven’t been there since I was a little kid,” says Wopper, whose par- ents brought him to California when he was three years old. Now he has to move back to Michoacán. When he learns that his longtime girlfriend is pregnant, the future looks even more uncertain. Wopper’s story unfolds as life in a rural village takes him in new and unexpected directions. This immigrant saga in reverse is a story of young people who must live with the reality of their parents’ dream. We know this story from the headlines, but up to now it has been unexplored literary territory.

February 216 pp. Also of Interest 5.5 x 8.5

$19.95 paper rode The Border Is Burning !"#$ 978-0-8263-5436-5 Thomas Fox Averill Ito Romo $22.95 CAD e-ISBN 978-0-8263-5437-2 $19.95 paper 978-0-8263-5030-5 $21.95 cloth 978-0-8263-5334-4

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 15 FICTION

8*7" "#/7*4' is the author of The Milagro Beanfield War and On Top of Spoon Mountain (UNM Press).

“One of the most intense anti-war books since The Red Badge of Courage.”

—$./6% &.52",*2 2#)(

American Blood A Novel 8*7" "#/7*4'

Michael Smith survives the Vietnam war only to find himself angry and adrift in a at war with itself. Though he cannot forget the pornographic atrocities he witnessed abroad, it is the pervasive brutality of civilian life that threatens to destroy him until he lands in a tormented yet life-saving relationship. First published in 1987 and now available to a new generation of readers, this disturbing novel foreshadows twenty-first-century headlines that feature assault rifles and mass murders. American Blood is a timely and fiercely moral statement on violence and loss.

April 312 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 $19.95s paper Motorcycle Ride on the Sea On Top of Spoon Mountain !"#$ 978-0-8263-5468-6 $22.95 CAD of Tranquility John Nichols e-*(12 978-0-8263-5469-3 Patricia Santana $19.95 paper 978-0-8263-5271-2 $16.95s paper 978-0-8263-2436-8 $24.95 cloth 978-0-8263-5270-7

16 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 FICTION

8*7" "#/7*4'’s most recent novel is On Top of Spoon Mountain, also available from the University of New Mexico Press. He is also the author of The Milagro Bean- field War and many other books. Nichols lives in Taos, New Mexico.

“One of the finest things he has ever written.” —+.( ,27#+#( "*&#(

An Elegy for September A Novel 8*7" "#/7*4'

He is fifty, a man of middle years with a weak heart and two failed marriages. Mourn- ing the loss of the boundless energy he squandered as a young man, he is a creature of habit now, relying on daily patterns to pace himself, to conserve what is left. She is nineteen, young enough to be his daughter, full of the vitality of youth and fearless—or perhaps only blind to the dangers life brings. Spare and moving, An Elegy for September captures the turning point in the life of a man as he confronts his own mortality—and confronts truths about himself he never suspected. Featuring some of John Nichols’s best writing, An Elegy for September is a brief, poignant, and eloquent novel that ren- ders an age-old story in a fresh and powerful form.

April 120 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 $19.95s paper Road to Nowhere and Other New !"#$ 978-0-8263-5470-9 $22.95 CAD Stories from the Southwest e-*(12 978-0-8263-5471-6 Edited by D. Seth Horton and Brett Garcia Myhren $24.95 paper 978-0-8263-5314-6

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 17 LITERARY CRITICISM

81-%' 2. 4#44%) is an assistant professor in the English department at the State University of New York at Albany.

NEW IN PAPER Cormac McCarthy New Directions %2#(%2 3) 81-%' 2. 4#44%)

Even before Harold Bloom designated Blood Meridian as the Great American Novel, Cormac McCarthy had attracted unprecedented attention as a novelist who is both serious and successful, a rare combination in recent American fiction. Critics have been quick to address McCarthy’s indebtedness to southern literature, Christianity, and existential thought, but the essays in this collection are among the first to tackle such issues as gender and race in McCarthy’s work. The rich complexity of the novels leaves room for a wide variety of interpretation. Some of the contributors see racist attitudes in McCarthy’s views of Mexico, whereas others praise his depiction of U.S.- Mexican border culture and contact. And by exploring the author’s use of and attitudes toward language, some of the contributors examine McCarthy’s complex and innova- tive storytelling techniques.

February

360 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9

$35.00s paper Adventures with Ed D. H. Lawrence in New Mexico !"#$ 978-0-8263-2767-3 A Portrait of Abbey “The Time is Different There” $40.50 CAD Jack Loeffler Arthur J. Bachrach e-*(12 978-0-8263-2768-0 $19.95 paper 978-0-8263-2388-0 $17.95 paper 978-0-8263-3496-1

18 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 POETRY

51(% 914% is the managing editor and a member of the board of directors for Red Hen Press. She teaches in the low-residency MFA program at the University of Nebraska. Kate is author and editor of several books, in- cluding Mating Season and Fishers of Men, and her work has been published in a variety of literary journals.

Mary Burritt Christiansen Poetry Series The Goldilocks Zone 51(% 914%

“Welcome to Kate Gale’s world. There are glass houses, a glass orchestra, sex on the roof. . . . Kate Gale knows her Bible and plays whatever music she wants on that musical instrument—but her música is always fresh, and it achieves wisdom.” —Ilya Kaminsky, author of Dancing in Odessa

“The clipped jumpy rhythm of these poems with their sudden bursts of syntax prove repeatedly that Kate Gale possesses a poetic tone and pace all her own. She is also re- freshingly out of step with today’s poetry of self-absorption, for she is fascinated less by her ego than by the strange variety of the world around us.” —Billy Collins, former U.S. Poet Laureate

February

88 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 $18.95 paper Flirt Losing the Ring in the River !"#$ 978-0-8263-5432-7 Noah Blaustein Marge Saiser $21.95 CAD $18.95 paper 978-0-8263-5383-2 $18.95 paper 978-0-8263-5320-7 e-*(12 978-0-8263-5433-4

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 19 POETRY • LITERATURE • SOUTHWEST

/. '. -%&, worked for Georgia O’Keeffe from 1973 to 1979 as secretary, librarian, reader, cook, nurse, and companion. Merrill is also the author of Weekends with O’Keeffe (UNM Press). She is the volunteer librarian at Ghost Ranch in northern New Mexico.

O’Keeffe Days in a Life /. '. -%&,

“Carol Merrill’s tribute to Georgia O’Keeffe is poems in the shape of finely rendered sketches, some of them even paintings. These intimate images convey the delicate and tough shape of O’Keeffe’s final years in New Mexico.” —Joy Harjo, author of She Had Some Horses

“Interesting, curious, distinctive, focused, condensed, epiphanous, ordinary & under- standable.” —Allen Ginsberg, author of Howl

February

144 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 8

$15.95 paper Miss O’Keeffe Weekends with O’Keeffe !"#$ 978-0-8263-5420-4 Christine Taylor Patten and C. S. Merrill $18.50 CAD Alvaro Cardona-Hine e-*(12 978-0-8263-5421-1 $21.95 paper 978-0-8263-4929-3 $19.95 paper 978-0-8263-1961-6

20 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 POETRY

2*!9 $14%"(#"%, author of four books of historical nonfiction, one short novel, and one book of poems, lives in Massachusettes.

With Our Eyes Wide Open Poems of the New American Century %2#(%2 3) 2*!9 $14%"(#"% Photo by Mike Gerden

With Our Eyes Wide Open is an anthology composed of poets from America and around the world who write about the struggles of the world’s outcasts, immigrants, and work- ing classes—victimized and then forgotten as nations March clash and wage relentless war. Although diverse in their 200 pp. ethnicity, experience, and writing styles, the contribut- 6 x 9 ing poets are united by a common interest in promoting $18.95 paper peace, justice, and human welfare. !"#$ 978-0-9910742-0-4 $21.95 CAD /'") '$- 0*'"" Otherness /41%4 14%9&:1

Claribel Alegría is one of the great voices in twentieth-century Latin American poetry. Her writing of the 1950s and 1960s reflects the views of the “Committed Generation” of Central America, seeking social and political justice for its citizens. She shared the Casas de las Americas poetry prize in 1978 with Nicaraguan poet Gioconda Belli. Alegría’s mature work reflects her anger and sense of loss over the murdered and “dis- appeared” throughout Latin America. In this volume, published in Madrid as Otredad in 2011, she separates her writing from her daily existence. RE!ANNOUNCED

March 64 pp. /41%4 14%9&:1 is the author 5 x 8 of many books of poetry and win- $11.95 paper ner of the Casas de las Americas !"#$ 978-0-9826968-8-0 poetry prize. $13.95 CAD

/'") '$- 0*'"" Photo by Margaret Randall

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 21 NATURE

AVAILABLE AGAIN

The Allure of Turquoise '%/*"2 %2#(#*" %2#(%2 3) 1&"*42 $#9#4

This second edition of The Allure of Turquoise offers an illuminating look at the cher- ished gemstone that has come to symbolize the culture and history of the Southwest. The powerful allure of New Mexico’s crown jewel comes alive through a diverse collec- tion of feature stories contributed by some of the state’s best writers. Their work delves into many facets of turquoise, from the miracle of its geological creation and its centuries- old mining history to its significance and use in the lives of Native Americans. Intriguing chapters touch on the mystery of old pawn, the treasures that reside in the world’s first Turquoise Museum, the innovative artistry of New Mexico’s contempo- rary Native jewelers, and how to distinguish the genuine article from cheap imitations. Readers will find plenty of turquoise lore and a fascinating essay on the strange-but- true relationship between ants and the blue-green stone.

November 2013 108 pp. Also of Interest 7 x 9 72 color photos, 5 halftones, 1 map Artists at Home Butterfly Landscapes Inspired Ideas from the Homes of of New Mexico $19.95 paper New Mexico Artists Steven Cary !"#$ 978-0-937206-87-4 Emily Drabanski $22.95 CAD $19.95 paper 978-1-934480-03-8 $'/ %'1!23 %4546!$' $12.95 paper 978-0-937206-66-9

22 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ART • PHOTOGRAPHY 2015 Enchanting New Mexico Calendar Destinations of Distinction 07*(*9&107' 3) 41!&%"/% 01&%"(

Take a wondrous journey through the state of New Mexico via color-drenched photographs from native-born artist Laurence Parent. A freelance photog rapher, Parent captures the Land of Enchant- ment at various nationally recognized compass points across the state.

June 10 x 12 $13.95 wall calendar !"#$ 978-1-934480-14-4 $15.95 CAD 41!&%"/% 01&%"( is a freelance photographer and writer $'/ %'1!23 %4546!$' specializing in landscape, travel, and nature.

2015 New Mexico Artist Calendar Robert Highsmith’s Vibrant Views in Watercolor

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 10 x 12 $13.95 wall calendar !"#$ 978-1-934480-15-1 &*3%&( 7#97'-#(7 is a recent recipient of the Governor’s $15.95 CAD Award for Excellence in the Arts. Highsmith has had numer- $'/ %'1!23 %4546!$' ous solo and group shows throughout the country and is a signature member of both the New Mexico Watercolor Society and the American Watercolor Society.

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 23 ART

%4#613%(7 /**5-&*-%&*, former art critic for the Santa Fe New Mexican, is currently a bookstore owner and citizen activist. '1&17 -//1&() is an artist and a garden designer. %&#/ (7*-'*" is an artist and owner/ director of Argos Gallery in Santa Fe. -*"() 07#'(%& was husband to Melinda Miles and is a retired engineer. Melinda Miles PASSAGES

Melinda Miles Passages %4#613%(7 /**5-&*-%&*, '1&17 -//1&(), %&#/ (7*-'*", ; -*"() 07#'(%&

Melinda Miles (1944–2009) belonged to a generation of artists who settled in Santa Fe around 1980. She had a career spanning nearly forty years. Her painting included portraiture, a series of interiors, a major body of still life that she was best known for, and a late series of train imagery that became a summation of her life’s work. Influ- ences from Hopper, Hammershoi, Peto, and the Luminists are evident. Yet she would develop a distinctive voice that allowed her to treat themes of passage and life’s imper- manence with what she once called a “sweet sadness.” Miles developed a painting technique that rivaled the realist trompe l’oeil style of William Harnett but adapted it to hint at transcendence rather than materiality. Of the motif of passage, recurring in each of her thematic periods, she said, “I find a kind of beauty in that ongoing stream of loss and newness.”

November 2013

180 pp. Also of Interest 11 x 11 150 color plates, 70 color Dark Light photos The Ceramics of Christine $65.00 cloth Nofchissey McHorse !"#$ 978-1-934491-40-9 Garth Clark and Mark Del Vecchio; $75.00 CAD photographs by Addison Doty +*'"23#33&" / "+ -'"!5$, ,,2 $45.00 cloth 978-1-934491-38-6 24 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 25 SOUTHWEST • POLITICS

2%2% +%42-1" retired from the New Mexico Senate in 2012. She is a political commentator in Albuquerque.

“From her unique vantage point, Senator Feldman has written an insightful and com- pelling history of the New Mexico Senate. We all know Dede is a skilled and deter- mined legislator. Now we know she is a talented writer as well.” —(#2,".$ ".& 50,++ Inside the New Mexico Senate Boots, Suits, and Citizens 2%2% +%42-1"

Elected to New Mexico’s state senate in 1996, Dede Feldman faced the challenges that confront state legislators around the country along with some that are uniquely New Mexican. In this forthright account of the workings of New Mexico’s legislature, she reveals how the work of governing is actually accomplished. In New Mexico’s part-time citizen legislature, Spanish may be spoken in the halls of the capitol as often as English, and Native American issues are often pivotal. But each year the Land of Enchantment’s legislators, like those in other states, must balance revenues and expenditures, tangle with lobbyists, and struggle with redistricting and

January

304 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 3 cartoons, 39 halftones A Woman in Both Houses Governing New Mexico $24.95 paper My Career in New Mexico Politics Edited by F. Chris Garcia, Kim !"#$ 978-0-8263-5438-9 Pauline Eisenstadt Seckler, Paul Hain, and Gilbert $28.95 CAD $27.95s paper 978-0-8263-5024-4 St. Clair e-*(12 978-0-8263-5439-6 $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-4128-0

26 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 campaign finance reform. State legislatures’ approaches to air pollution, drunk driv- ing, and chronic disease, Feldman’s book reveals, find their way into national law after they’ve been road tested on the highways of various states.

“Completely honest and highly informative. To look at a legislative body is to observe democracy in the raw—with all its diverse characters and influ- ences and its many conflicts, compromises, and achievements. Dede Feldman, a first-rate observer and chronicler, shows us the insides of the New Mexico State Senate.” —3$#0 -,$$*(, 3.$&#$ 5.(. (#2,".$ ,20 '$.3#((.$ #&#$*"5( .3 '.+*"*/,+ (/*#2/#, 52*:#$(*"% .3 2#) &#;*/.

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 27 HISTORY • SOUTHWEST

21$#2 4. /1++%) has served as the director of the Uni- versity of New Mexico’s Harwood Library and Museum in Taos, director of Instructional Support Services at San Juan College in Farmington, and vice president for in- struction at Clovis Community College.

Chasing the Santa Fe Ring Power and Privilege in Territorial New Mexico 21$#2 4. /1++%)

Anyone who has even a casual acquaintance with the in the nineteenth century has heard of the Santa Fe Ring—seekers of power and wealth in the post–Civil War period famous for public corruption and for dispossessing land hold- ers. Surprisingly, however, scholars have alluded to the Ring but never really described this shadowy entity, which to this day remains a kind of black hole in New Mexico’s territorial history. David Caffey looks beyond myth and symbol to explore its history. Who were its supposed members, and what did they do to deserve their unsavory rep- utation? Were their actions illegal or unethical? What were the roles of leading figures like Stephen B. Elkins and Thomas B. Catron? What was their influence on New Mex- ico’s struggle for statehood?

March

328 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 29 halftones, 1 map, 1 table Edmund G. Ross Enchantment and Exploitation $34.95s cloth Soldier, Senator, Abolitionist The Life and Hard Times of a !"#$ 978-0-8263-5442-6 Richard A. Ruddy New Mexico Mountain Range $40.50 CAD $39.95s cloth 978-0-8263-5374-0 William deBuys e-*(12 978-0-8263-5443-3 $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-0820-7

28 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 AMERICAN WEST • U.S. HISTORY • MEDICINE

&*3%&( -. !(4%), formerly the chief historian of the National Park Service, is the author of seventeen dis- tinguished books on the history of the American West, most recently Geronimo.

An Army Doctor on the Western Frontier Journals and Letters of John Vance Lauderdale, 1864–1890 %2#(%2 3) &*3%&( -. !(4%)

Assigned to the District of Utah during the Civil War, physician John Vance Lauderdale spent the next twenty-five years on army posts in the American West, serving in Cali- fornia, Arizona, New Mexico, South Dakota, and Texas. Throughout his career he kept a detailed journal and sent long letters home to his sister in upstate New York. This selection of Lauderdale’s writings, edited and annotated by a premier historian of the American West, offers an insightful account of army life that will teach readers much about the settlement and growth of the West in a time of rapid change.

April

224 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 34 halftones, 6 maps The Indian Frontier 1846–1890, Frontier Cavalry Trooper $29.95 cloth Revised Edition The Letters of Private Eddie !"#$ 978-0-8263-5453-2 Robert M. Utley Matthews, 1869–1874 $34.50 CAD $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-2998-1 Edited by Douglas C. McChristian e-*(12 978-0-8263-5455-6 $55.00s cloth 978-0-8263-5226-2

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 29 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

30 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ANTHROPOLOGY • ARCHAEOLOGY • SOUTHWEST

21$#2 %. '(!1&(, a senior scholar and the interim president at the School for Advanced Research, is also the author of The Ancient Southwest: Chaco Canyon, Bandelier, and Mesa Verde and Peoples on the Pajarito Plateau: Archaeology and Efficiency (both avail- able from UNM Press).

“A must-read book for those intrigued by the prehistory of the Southwest.” –".2% -*++#$&,2

Anasazi America Seventeen Centuries on the Road from Center Place '%/*"2 %2#(#*" 21$#2 %. '(!1&(

At the height of their power in the late eleventh century, the Chaco Anasazi dominated a territory in the American Southwest larger than any European principality of the time. Developed over the course of centuries, Chacoan society thrived for over two hundred years, then collapsed dramatically in a mere forty years. In this new edition, David E. Stuart incorporates dramatic new research findings based on caloric flows, analyzes the rise and fall of the Chaco Anasazi, and identifies similar patterns in modern societies. Stuart argues that Chaco’s failure was a failure to adapt to the consequences of rapid growth— including misuse of farmland, malnutri- tion, loss of community, and inability to deal with climatic catastrophe. Have modern societies learned from the example of the Chaco Anasazi, or are we risking a similar cultural collapse?

May 344 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9

1 drawing, 42 halftones, 2 figs., 4 maps, 2 charts, 1 table Pueblo Peoples on the The Ancient Southwest Pajarito Plateau Chaco Canyon, Bandelier, and Mesa $27.95 paper Archaeology and Efficiency Verde, Revised Edition !"#$ 978-0-8263-5478-5 $32.50 CAD David E. Stuart David E. Stuart e-*(12 978-0-8263-5479-2 $21.95 paper 978-0-8263-4911-8 $19.95 paper 978-0-8263-4638-4

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 31 HISTORY • AMERICAN WEST

&#/71&2 +4#"( is the coeditor of The Coronado Expedi- tion: From the Distance of 460 Years and The Latest Word from 1540: People, Places, and Portrayals of the Coronado Expedition and the author of Great Cruelties Have Been Reported: The 1544 Investigation of the Coronado Expedi- tion (all UNM Press).

NEW IN PAPER No Settlement, No Conquest A History of the Coronado Entrada &#/71&2 +4#"(

Between 1539 and 1542, two thousand indigenous Mexicans, led by Spanish explorers, made an armed reconnaissance of what is now the American Southwest. The Span- iards’ goal was to seize control of the people of the region and convert them to the reli- gion, economy, and way of life of sixteenth-century Spain. The area’s unfamiliar terrain and hostile natives doomed the expedition. The surviving Spaniards returned to Nueva España, disillusioned and heavily in debt with a trail of destruction left in their wake that would set the stage for Spain’s conflicts in the future. Flint incorporates recent archaeological and documentary discoveries to offer a new interpretation of how Spaniards attempted to conquer the New World, and he provides insight into those who resisted conquest.

November 2013

376 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 7 maps The Coronado Expedition Great Cruelties Have Been $29.95 paper From the Distance of 460 Years Reported !"#$ 978-0-8263-4363-5 Edited by Richard Flint and The 1544 Investigation of the $34.50 CAD Shirley Cushing Flint Coronado Expedition e-*(12 978-0-8263-4364-2 $40.00s paper 978-0-8263-2976-9 Richard Flint $60.00s paper 978-0-8263-5326-9

32 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 HISTORY • SOUTHWEST

41,&%"/% &. -!&07) spent ten years on the Philmont staff and was the author of numerous books and articles on western history.

AVAILABLE AGAIN Philmont A History of New Mexico’s Cimarron Country 41,&%"/% &. -!&07)

Here is the first comprehensive history of the Colfax County area of northeastern New Mexico. Best known today as the home of the Philmont Scout Ranch, where thousands of Boy Scouts from around the world gather every year, this beautiful country has a vio- lent and varied past. Centering around the town of Cimarron, controversy over control of the land began in the sixteenth century with quarrels among rival American Indian tribes. Spanish and later American troops continued the bloodshed for centuries more. The culmination of the area’s history of violence was the notorious Colfax County War between homesteaders and landowners that began in 1875 and continued until the Supreme Court acted fifteen years later. A gold and silver rush lured prospectors to the Maxwell ranch and booming Elizabethtown in the 1860s. But by 1870 the supply of precious metals was almost exhausted, and today Elizabethtown is a ghost town.

November 2013

288 pp. Also of Interest 5.5 x 8 3 maps Los Alamos—The Ranch $19.95 paper School Years, 1917–1943 !"#$ 978-0-8263-0244-1 John D. Wirth and Linda $22.95 CAD Harvey Aldrich e-*(12 978-0-8263-2345-3 $35.00s paper 978-0-8263-2884-7

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 33 '%4%/(%2 (&12% 31/54#'(

An Archaeology of Detonography Close to Home Architecture The Explosive Art of Photographs Photowriting the Built Evelyn Rosenberg &#/71&2 '. 3!',%44 Environment %$%4)" &*'%"3%&9; $29.95 cloth 2%""#' (%24*/5 07*(*9&107) 3) *(12 978-0-8263-5287-3 8*7" (&*((%& $50.00 /+."- #-*(12 978-0-8263-5289-7 *(12 978-0-8263-5305-4 $39.95 cloth #-*(12 978-0-8263-5306-1 *(12 978-0-8263-5360-3 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5361-0

Capturing the Women’s Easter Island’s Silent Giveaways Army Corps Sentinels An ABC Book of Loanwords The World War II The Sculpture and Architecture from the Americas Photographs of Captain of Rapa Nui 4#"21 3*)2%" Charlotte T. McGraw 5%""%(7 (&%#'(%&, 01(&#/#1 $17.95 cloth +&1"<*#'% 31&"%' 3*""%44 $1&91' /1'1"*$1, *(12 978-0-8263-4726-8 ; &*"142 5%$#" 3!44#' ; /41!2#* /&#'(#"* #-*(12 978-0-8263-4728-2 $39.95 paper $45.00 cloth *(12 978-0-8263-5340-5 *(12 978-0-8263-5264-4 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5341-2 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5266-8

34 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 '%4%/(%2 (&12% 31/54#'(

Grandma’s Santo on Its Hotel Mariachi The Legend of Ponciano Head/El santo patas arriba Urban Space and Cultural Gutiérrez and the de mi abuelita Heritage in Los Angeles Mountain Thieves Stories of Days Gone By in /1(7%&#"% 4. 5!&41"2 ; 1. 913&#%4 -%4>"2%6 ; (7% Hispanic Villages of New Mexico / %"&#=!% &. 41-12 01#6 +1-#4); #44!'(&1(#*"' 3) Cuentos de días gloriosos en pueb- 07*(*9&107) 1-) /?&2*$1 litos hispanos de Nuevo México 3) -#9!%4 1. 91"2%&( $18.95 paper "1'1&#* 91&/:1 $29.95 paper *(12 978-0-8263-5239-2 $24.95 paper *(12 978-0-8263-5372-6 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5240-8 *(12 978-0-8263-5328-3 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5373-3 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5329-0

The Pancake Stories / Sagrado Secrets of the Tsil Café Cuentos del Panqueque A Photopoetics Across the A Novel with Recipes 0%99) 0*"2 /7!&/7; (&1"'- Chicano Homeland (7*-1' +*. 1$%, 41(#*" 3) "*@4 /7#4(*"; '0%"/%& &. 7%&&%&1 ; $19.95 paper #44!'(&1(#*"' 3) %4#613%(7 4%$# &*-%&*; 07*(*9&107) *(12 978-0-8263-5112-8 /*-+*&( /7!&/7 3) &*3%&( 51#'%& #-*(12 978-0-8263-5113-5 $19.95 cloth $29.95 paper *(12 978-0-8263-5387-0 *(12 978-0-8263-5354-2 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5388-7 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5355-9

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 35 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

36 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 '/7*41&4)

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 37 SPORTS/RECREATION • SCIENCE • YOUNG ADULT

8*7" (1)4*& is a former soccer referee, an engineer, a science writer, a historian, and the author of four books on New Mexican history.

Barbara Guth Worlds of Wonder Science Series for Young Readers The Science of Soccer A Bouncing Ball and a Banana Kick 8*7" (1)4*&

Soccer is the most popular sport in the world. It is also an endless scientific panorama. Every movement by the players and each interaction with the ball involves physics, fluid mechanics, biology, and physiology, to name just a few of the scientific disci- plines. In a book that targets middle and high school players, Taylor begins with a his- tory of soccer and its physical and mathematical aspects. He then addresses important questions such as how and why a ball bounces, how the ball spins, and what these dynamics mean for the game. He introduces readers to the science of kicking, heading, and trapping and looks at the sources of the energy required to run, jump, and kick

June 120 pp. Also of Interest 7 x 10 60 color illustrations Southwest Aquatic Habitats Cell Phone Science $34.95s cloth On the Trail of Fish in a Desert What Happens When You !"#$ 978-0-8263-5464-8 Call and Why $40.50 CAD Daniel Shaw e-*(12 978-0-8263-5465-5 $34.95s cloth 978-0-8263-5309-2 Michele Sequeira and Michael Westphal $34.95s cloth 978-0-8263-4968-2

38 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 for an entire game. Taylor then puts it all together by following a sequence of plays and describing the science behind tactical maneuvers. Sidebars and appendices allow those with a more mathematical bent to follow the physics and perform experiments to see the effects of phenomena like drag, bounce, and spin. In addition, key terminology is highlighted, explained in the text, and summarized in the glossary.

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 39 CHICANA AND CHICANO • HISTORY

8!1" 9ó-%6-=!#A*"%' is a professor of history at UCLA. His earlier books include Mexican American Labor, 1790–1990, Roots of Chicano Politics, 1600–1940, and Chicano Politics: Reality and Promise, 1940–1990, all published by the University of New Mexico Press. #&%"% $B'=!%6 is the director of Chicana and Chi- cano Studies at the University of New Mexico. She is a coauthor of Latino-Latino Americanos, 2000: Things Social Do Not Melt into the Air and a coeditor of The Borders in All of Us: New Approaches to Global Diasporic Studies.

Contextos Series Making Aztlán Ideology and Culture of the Chicana and Chicano Movement, 1966–1977 8!1" 9ó-%6-=!#A*"%' ; #&%"% $B'=!%6

This book provides a long-needed overview of the Chicana and Chicano movement’s social history as it grew, flourished, and then slowly fragmented. The authors examine the movement’s origins in the 1960s and 1970s, showing how it evolved from a vari- ety of organizations and activities united in their quest for basic equities for Mexican Americans in U.S. society. Gómez-Quiñones and Vásquez’s narrative offers an assess- ment of U.S. society and the Mexican American community at a critical time, offering a unique understanding of its civic progress toward a more equitable social order.

"#$ %#&'#% ()"*#+*)%: In keeping with the University of New Mexi- co’s Southwest Hispanic Research Institute’s (*"/)) trans- disciplinary mission, this series publishes books that deepen our understanding of the historical, social, political, and April cultural issues that impact Latinas and Latinos. Topics 496 pp. may span regional, national, and transnational contexts. 6 x 9 We invite scholarship in Chicana and Chicano studies, the 28 halftones social sciences, public policy, the humanities, health and $45.00s paper natural science, and other professional fields. !"#$ 978-0-8263-5466-2 $51.95 CAD %#&'#% #,'*)&%: Antoinette Sedillo López, Christine e-*(12 978-0-8263-5467-9 Marie Sierra, and Michael Trujillo

40 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 CHICANA AND CHICANO • LITERARY CRITICISM

-1"!%4 -. -1&(:"-&*2&:9!%6 is a professor of literature and a founding faculty member of the School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts at the University of California, Merced.

With a Book in Their Hands Chicano/a Readers and Readerships across the Centuries %2#(%2 3) -1"!%4 -. -1&(:"-&*2&:9!%6

Literary history is a history of reading. What happens during the act of reading is the subject of the branch of literary scholarship known as reader-response theory. Does the text guide the reader? Does the reader operate independently of the text? Questions like these shape the approach of the essays in this book edited by a scholar known for his groundbreaking work in using reader-response theory as a window into Chicana and Chicano literature. Manuel M. Martín-Rodríguez has overseen several research projects aimed at doc- umenting Chicana and Chicano reading practices and experiences. Here he gathers diverse and passionate accounts of reading drawn from that research.

June

288 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 $45.00s cloth Conversations with Chicana Creativity and Criticism !"#$ 978-0-8263-5476-1 Contemporary Chicana New Frontiers in American $51.95 CAD and Chicano Writers Literature e-*(12 978-0-8263-5477-8 Edited by Hector Torres Edited by María Herrera-Sobek $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-4088-7 and Helena María Viramontes $27.95s paper 978-0-8263-1712-4

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 41 MUSIC • SOUTHWEST •BILINGUAL

/#0"* +&%2%&#/* $#9#4 has been recognized by the New Mexico Endowment for the Humanities and the Smithsonian Institution. He received the New Mexico Governor’s Award in 1994.

New Mexican Folk Music/Cancionero del Folklor Nuevomexicano Treasures of a People/El Tesoro del Pueblo

/#0"* +&%2%&#/* $#9#4; with editorial contributions by David García; foreword by Enrique R. Lamadrid

Cipriano Frederico Vigil is the most important performer of traditional Nuevomexi- cano folk music in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. This bilingual panoramic book presents the songs that are his life’s work, spanning half a century of listening, playing, composing, and singing ritual, social, and dance music. New Mexican Folk Music includes much traditional material that has never been seen before or studied by scholars or students. Like the Mexican group Los Folkloristas with which he apprenticed in the late 1970s, his goal has been to research and master local styles, to introduce new listeners to traditional music, and to build on tradition by creating new compositions that address contemporary social themes.

March

232 pp. Also of Interest 7 x 10 16 drawings, 10 halftones, La Música de los Viejitos 1 audio CD Hispano Folk Music of the Rio $45.00s cloth Grande del Norte !"#$ 978-0-8263-4937-8 Jack Loeffler, Enrique R. Lamadrid, $51.95 CAD and Katherine Loeffler e-*(12 978-0-8263-4939-2 $24.95 paper 978-0-8263-1884-8

42 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 FOLKLORE • MUSIC • SOUTHWEST

8*7" 2*"142 &*33 (1892–1989), professor and dean emeritus of the College of Fine Arts at the University of New Mexico (1942–1957), was responsible for the growth of fine arts at the University of New Mexico in the 1940s and 1950s. A composer of stage, classical, and electronic music, Robb was also the author of Hispanic Folk Songs of New Mexico (UNM Press). 81/5 4*%++4%& is an aural historian, radio producer, writer, and musician. He lives in Santa Fe.

Hispanic Folk Music of New Mexico and the Southwest A Self-Portrait of a People

8*7" 2*"142 &*33; foreword by Jack Loeffler; prologue by Enrique R. Lamadrid

First published in 1980 and now available only from the University of New Mexico Press, this classic compilation of New Mexico folk music is based on thirty-five years of field research by a giant of modern music. Composer , a passionate aficionado of the traditions of his adopted state, traveled New Mexico recording and transcribing music from the time he arrived in the Southwest in 1941.

March

920 pp. Also of Interest 7 x 10 49 halftones Hispanic Folk Songs of $75.00s cloth New Mexico !"#$ 978-0-8263-4430-4 With Selected Songs Collected, Tran- $87.50 CAD scribed, and Arranged for Voice with e-*(12 978-0-8263-4432-8 Piano or Guitar Accompaniment, John Donald Robb Revised Edition $29.95s Spiral 978-0-8263-4434-2

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 43 HISTORY • SOUTHWEST • AMERICAN INDIANS

-14/*4- %3a(, director of the Center for Land Grant Studies, is also the author of Land Grants and Law- suits in Northern New Mexico. &#/5 7%"2&#/5' is the New Mexico State Historian. &#/71&2 ,. 7!97%' is an attorney in Santa Fe spe- cializing in Indian law and a partner in the Rothstein law firm.

Four Square Leagues Pueblo Indian Land in New Mexico -14/*4- %3a(, &#/5 7%"2&#/5', ; &#/71&2 ,. 7!97%'

This long-awaited book is the most detailed and up-to-date account of the complex history of Pueblo Indian land in New Mexico, beginning in the late seventeenth century and continuing to the present day. The authors have scoured documents and legal deci- sions to trace the rise of the mysterious Pueblo League between 1700 and 1821 as the basis of Pueblo land under Spanish rule. Characterized by success stories of protection of Pueblo land as well as by centuries of encroachment by non–American Indians on Pueblo lands and resources, this is a uniquely New Mexican history that also reflects issues of indigenous land tenure that vex contested territories all over the world.

June

496 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 12 drawings, 6 halftones, Land Grants and Lawsuits The Witches of Abiquiu 5 maps in Northern New Mexico, The Governor, the Priest, the $65.00s cloth Third Edition Genízaro Indians, and the Devil !"#$ 978-0-8263-5472-3 Malcolm Ebright Malcolm Ebright and Rick $75.00 CAD $27.00s paper 978-0-9605202-1-3 Hendricks e-*(12 978-0-8263-5473-0 $24.95 paper 978-0-8263-2032-2

44 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 AMERICAN INDIANS • ANTHROPOLOGY • WESTERN HISTORY

,#44#1- -. /4%-%"(' taught cultural anthropology, folklore studies, literature, and American Indian studies at Arkansas State University.

NEW IN PAPER Imagining Geronimo An Apache Icon in Popular Culture ,#44#1- -. /4%-%"('

His face has appeared on T-shirts, postage stamps, jigsaw puzzles, posters, and an Andy Warhol print. A celebrity and a tourist attraction who attended three World’s Fairs and rode in President Theodore Roosevelt’s inaugural parade, he is a character in such classic westerns as Stagecoach and Broken Arrow. His name was used in the dar- ing military operation that killed Osama bin Laden in 2011, and rumors about the loca- tion of his skull at a Yale University club have circulated for a century. These are just a few of the ways that the Apache shaman and war leader known to Anglo Americans as Geronimo has remained alive in the mainstream American imagination and beyond. Clements’s study samples the repertoire of Geronimo stories and examines Amer- icans’ changing sense of Geronimo in terms of traditional patterns—trickster social bandit, patriot chief, sage elder, and culture hero.

June

320 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 27 halftones Gatewood and Geronimo $24.95s paper Louis Kraft !"#$ 978-0-8263-4021-4 $27.95 paper 978-0-8263-2130-5 $28.95 CAD e-*(12 978-0-8263-5323-8

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 45 ANTHROPOLOGY • ARCHAEOLOGY • LATIN AMERICA

8*%4 ,. 01451 is an associate professor of anthropology and Latin American and Latino studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago and the author of Unconquered Lacandon Maya: Ethnohistory and Archaeology of Indigenous Culture Change.

Archaeologies of Landscapes in the Americas Series Maya Pilgrimage to Ritual Landscapes Insights from Archaeology, History, and Ethnography 8*%4 ,. 01451

Pilgrimage to ritually significant places is a part of daily life in the Maya world. These journeys involve important social and practical concerns, such as the maintenance of food sources and world order. Why has Maya pilgrimage to ritual landscapes prevailed from the distant past, and why are journeys to ritual landscapes important in Maya religion? How can archaeologists recognize Maya pilgrimage, and how does it compare to similar behavior at ritual landscapes around the world? The author addresses these questions and others through cross-cultural comparisons, archaeological data, and eth- nographic insights.

"#$ %#&'#% ,$/-,#.+.7*#( .3 +,20(/,'#( *2 "-# ,&#$*/,( (#$*#(: The application of landscape archaeology to ancient, historic, and modern human societies and to June divergent types of sites has resulted in an exciting and wide- 376 pp. ranging field of archaeological inquiry. This new series 6 x 9 explores the dynamic interactions and creations of place 56 drawings, 107 halftones, 6 and space throughout the Americas, incorporating diverse maps, 4 tables approaches and case studies. $75.00s cloth !"#$ 978-0-8263-5474-7 (#$*#( #0*".$: Jerry D. Moore $87.50 CAD e-*(12 978-0-8263-5475-4

46 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ANTHROPOLOGY • FOLKLORE • LATIN AMERICA

&*3%&( -. 41!974#", a curator emeritus at the Smith- sonian Institution, is also the translator of Travelers to the Other World: A Maya View of North America (UNM Press).

Mayan Tales from Chiapas, Mexico &*3%&( -. 41!974#"; with contributions by Francisca Hernández Hernández; Spanish translation by Socorro Gómez Hernández and Juan Benito de la Torre; foreword by Gary H. Gossen

The forty-two stories presented in this book were told to Robert Laughlin in Tzotzil by Francisca Hernández Hernández, an elderly woman known as doña Pancha, the only speaker of Tzotzil left in the village of San Felipe Ecatepec in Chiapas, Mexico. Laughlin and doña Pancha’s running conversation is the source for the stories, which means they are told in much the same way that stories are told in traditional native settings. Doña Pancha is bilingual in Tzotzil and Spanish, and the stories are presented here in English, Tzotzil, and Spanish. They range from mythological sacred stories to quasi- historical legends to historical accounts of life in the twentieth century.

May

288 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 $75.00s cloth Mayan Folktales !"#$ 978-0-8263-5448-8 Folklore from Lake Atitlán, She-Calf and Other Quechua Folk $87.50 CAD Guatemala Tales e-*(12 978-0-8263-5449-5 Edited by James D. Sexton Edited by Johnny Payne $21.95 paper 978-0-8263-2104-6 $35.00s paper 978-0-8263-2195-4

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 47 48 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 HISTORY • LATIN AMERICA

714 41"9+!& is an associate professor of history at the State University of New York at Buffalo.

Diálogos Series Native Brazil Beyond the Convert and the Cannibal, 1500–1900 %2#(%2 3) 714 41"9+!&

The earliest European accounts of Brazil’s indigenous inhabitants focused on the natives’ startling appearance and conduct and on the process of converting them to clothed, docile Christian vassals. This volume contributes to the unfinished task of moving beyond such polarities and dispelling the stereotypes they fostered, which have impeded scholars’ ability to make sense of Brazil’s rich indigenous past. This volume is a significant contribution to understanding the ways Brazil’s native peoples shaped their own histories. Incorporating the tools of anthropology, geogra- phy, cultural studies, and literary analysis, alongside those of history, the contributors revisit old sources and uncover new ones. They examine the Indians’ first encounters with Portuguese explorers and missionaries and pursue the consequences through four centuries.

February

304 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 36 halftones, 6 maps, 1 chart, The Course of Andean History 4 tables Peter V. N. Henderson $29.95s paper $34.95s paper 978-0-8263-5336-8 !"#$ 978-0-8263-3841-9 $34.50 CAD e-*(12 978-0-8263-3842-6

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 49 HISTORY • LATIN AMERICA • GENDER STUDIES

81$#%& $#441-+4*&%' is an associate professor at the Uni- versity of Illinois at Chicago and author of Carlo Ginz- burg: el historiador como teórico and Dangerous Speech: A Social History of Blasphemy in Colonial Mexico. '*")1 4#0'%((-&#$%&1 is a professor at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, and coauthor of The Faces of Honor: Sex, Shame, and Violence in Colonial Latin America (UNM Press).

Diálogos Series Emotions and Daily Life in Colonial Mexico %2#(%2 3) 81$#%& $#441-+4*&%' ; '*")1 4#0'%((-&#$%&1

The history of emotions is a new approach to social history, and this book is the first in English to systematically examine emotions in Colonial Mexico. It is easy to assume that emotions are a given, unchanging aspect of human psychology. But the emotions we feel reflect the times in which we live. The essays collected here chart daily life through the study of sex and marriage, love, lust and jealousy, civic rituals and preach- ing, gambling and leisure, prayer and penance, and protest and rebellion. The first part of the book deals with how individuals experienced emotions on a personal level. The second group of essays explores the role of the state in guiding and channeling the expression and the objects of emotions.

May

272 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 19 halftones, 1 chart No Mere Shadows Runaway Daughters $29.95s paper Faces of Widowhood in Early Colo- Seduction, Elopement, and Honor in !"#$ 978-0-8263-5462-4 nial Mexico Nineteenth-Century Mexico $34.50 CAD Shirley Cushing Flint Kathryn A. Sloan e-*(12 978-0-8263-5463-1 $55.00s cloth 978-0-8263-5311-5 $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-4477-9

50 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 LATIN AMERICA • HISTORY

$#$#1"1 4. 9&#%/* is an associate professor of history at the University of Missouri, Kansas City.

The Politics of Giving in the Viceroyalty of Rio de la Plata Donors, Lenders, Subjects, and Citizens $#$#1"1 4. 9&#%/*

Relying on Spanish and Argentine archival research, the author analyzes the “gifts” (donativos) that residents of the Viceroyalty of Rio de la Plata, or colonial Argentina, gave to the Spanish Crown and the city council of Buenos Aires. She examines the cultural, political, constitutional, and legal practices associated with loans and dona- tivos in comparison with the practices of other Atlantic states, emphasizing the quid pro quo offered by the crown in the form of appointments to office and other favors. Examining donors, donations, and expectations, she argues that the Spanish system achieved at the imperial level what the British empire and the French monarchy failed to accomplish.

March

344 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 1 map, 42 tables Death, Dismemberment, and Heroes on Horseback $55.00s cloth Memory A Life and Times of the Last Gaucho !"#$ 978-0-8263-5446-4 Body Politics in Latin America Caudillos $65.00 CAD Edited by Lyman L. Johnson John Charles Chasteen e-*(12 978-0-8263-5447-1 $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-3201-1 $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-1598-4

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 51 LATIN AMERICA • SOUTHWEST • HISTORY

&1)-*"2 7. (7*-0'*" is the director emeritus of the Arizona State Museum and Riecker Distinguished Professor emeritus in the School of Anthropology at the University of Arizona.

A Jesuit Missionary in Eighteenth-Century Sonora The Family Correspondence of Philipp Segesser %2#(%2 3) &1)-*"2 7. (7*-0'*"; translated by Werner S. Zimmt and Robert E. Dahlquist

In the very last year of the seventeenth century, a ten-year-old boy in the city of Lucerne, Switzerland, announced to his parents that he wanted to become a Jesuit missionary and save souls in faraway lands. Philipp Segesser got his wish when he was sent to northwestern Mexico in 1731. For the next thirty years he carried on an active correspon- dence with his family and religious affiliates. His letters home, translated and edited in this fascinating book, provide a frank and intimate view of missionary life on the remote northwestern frontier of New Spain. The editor’s introduction sets the letters in biographical and historical context.

April

456 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 2 drawings, 5 halftones, Art and Faith in Mexico Sonora 6 maps The Nineteenth-Century Retablo An Intimate Geography $75.00s cloth Tradition David Yetman !"#$ 978-0-8263-5424-2 Edited by Charles Muir Lovell and $24.95 paper 978-0-8263-2184-8 $87.50 CAD Elizabeth Netto Calil Zarur e-*(12 978-0-8263-5425-9 $19.95 paper 978-0-8263-2324-8

52 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 LATIN AMERICA • HISTORY • RELIGION

21$#2 %'0#"*'1 is an associate professor of history at Rhode Island College.

Jesuit Student Groups, the Univer- sidad Iberoamericana, and Political Resistance in Mexico, 1913–1979 21$#2 %'0#"*'1

The history of Mexico in the twentieth century is marked by conflict between church and state. This book focuses on the efforts of the Roman Catholic Church to influence Mexican society through Jesuit-led organizations such as the Mexican Catholic Youth Association, the National Catholic Student Union, and the Universidad Iberoamer- icana. Dedicated to the education and indoctrination of Mexico’s middle- and upper-class youth, these organizations were designed to promote conservative Catholic values. The author shows that they left a very different imprint on Mexican society, training a generation of activists.

June

216 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 $55.00s cloth Local Religion in Colonial Mexico Religion in New Spain !"#$ 978-0-8263-5460-0 Edited by Martin Austin Nesvig Edited by Susan Schroeder and $65.00 CAD Stafford Poole C.M. $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-3402-2 e-*(12 978-0-8263-5461-7 $50.00s cloth 978-0-8263-3978-2

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 53 HISTORY • LATIN AMERICA • MILITARY

7143%&( 8*"%' directs the North American Studies Programme at St Antony’s College, Oxford.

The War Has Brought Peace to Mexico World War II and the Consolidation of the Post-Revolutionary State 7143%&( 8*"%'

Although the battlefields of World War II lay thousands of miles from Mexican shores, the conflict had a significant influence on the country’s political development. Though the war years in Mexico have attracted less attention than other periods, this book shows how the crisis atmosphere of the early 1940s played an important part in the consolidation of the post-revolutionary regime. Through its management of Mexico’s role in the war, including the sensitive ques- tion of military participation, the administration of Manuel Avila Camacho was able to insist upon a policy of national unity, bringing together disparate factions and making open opposition to the government difficult.

April

312 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 24 halftones Mexico OtherWise $55.00s cloth Modern Mexico in the Eyes !"#$ 978-0-8263-5130-2 of Foreign Observers $65.00 CAD Edited by Jürgen Buchenau e-*(12 978-0-8263-5132-6 $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-2313-2

54 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ANTHROPOLOGY • LATIN AMERICA • HISTORY

(&%$*& '(1/5 is the director of the Centre for Citizen- ship, Civil Society and Rule of Law at the University of Aberdeen, where he also teaches in the Department of Hispanic Studies.

NEW IN PAPER Knowing History in Mexico An Ethnography of Citizenship (&%$*& '(1/5

What is history? And why do people value it? Basing his inquiry on fieldwork near Gua- dalajara in west Mexico, anthropologist Trevor Stack focuses on one reason for which people commonly value history—knowing history is said to make for better citizens, which helps to explain why history is taught at schools worldwide and history ques- tions are included in citizenship tests. Stack combines his Mexican fieldwork with his personal experience of history in Scottish schools and at Oxford University to try to pin- point what exactly it is that makes people who know history seem like better citizens.

August 2013

184 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 4 drawings, 29 halftones, Que vivan los tamales! True Stories of Crime in 1 map Food and the Making of Mexican Modern Mexico $30.00s paper Identity Edited by Robert Buffington !"#$ 978-0-8263-5253-8 Jeffrey Pilcher and Pablo Piccato $34.50 CAD $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-1873-2 $29.95s paper 978-0-8263-4529-5 e-*(12 978-0-8263-5254-5

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 55 ANTHROPOLOGY • AMERICAN INDIANS • LINGUISTICS

21$#2 4%%2*- '71!4 is a research associate at the University of Arizona. Among his previous publications is Hopi Traditional Literature (UNM Press).

A Prehistory of Western North America The Impact of Uto-Aztecan Languages 21$#2 4%%2*- '71!4

This book offers a new approach to the use of linguistic data to reconstruct prehistory. The author shows how a well-studied language family—in this case Uto-Aztecan—can be used as an instrument for reconstructing prehistory. The main focus of Shaul’s work is the mapping of Uto-Aztecan. By presenting var- ious models of Uto-Aztecan prehistory, by assessing multiple models simultaneously, and by guiding readers through areas where the evidence is not so clear, Shaul helps nonspecialists develop the tools needed for evaluating various historical linguistics models themselves. He evaluates both archaeological and genetic evidence as well, placing it carefully alongside the linguistic evi- dence he knows best.

June

432 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 2 drawings, 7 halftones, Hopi Traditional Literature Athabaskan Language Studies 9 maps, 72 tables David Leedom Shaul Essays in Honor of Robert W. Young $65.00s cloth $49.95s cloth 978-0-8263-2009-4 Edited by Sally Midgette, Eloise !"#$ 978-0-8263-5480-8 Jelinek, Keren Rice, and Leslie $75.00 CAD Saxon e-*(12 978-0-8263-5481-5 $60.00s cloth 978-0-8263-1705-6 56 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ARCHAEOLOGY • ANTHROPOLOGY

3&!/% 3. 7!/5%44 is an associate professor of anthro- pology at the University of New Mexico and the senior research coordinator at the Maxwell Museum of Anthropology. 8. 21$#2 5#43) is an assistant professor of anthropol- ogy at University.

“A unique, significant contribution to our maturing studies of the Clovis era.” —7,$% -,%2#(, ,5"-.$ .3 !"# #(/14 *#!!1#$#'! %+ '%/!" ($#/).(: !"# .1%0)* #/(

Clovis Caches Recent Discoveries and New Research %2#(%2 3) 3&!/% 3. 7!/5%44 ; 8. 21$#2 5#43)

The Paleoindian Clovis culture is known for distinctive stone and bone tools often associated with mammoth and bison remains, dating back some 13,500 years. While the term Clovis is known to every archaeology student, few books have detailed the specifics of Clovis archaeology. This collection of essays investigates caches of Clovis tools, many of which have only recently come to light. These caches are time capsules that allow archaeologists to examine Clovis tools at earlier stages of manufacture than the broken and discarded artifacts typically recovered from other sites. The studies comprising this volume treat methodological and theoretical issues including the rec- ognition of Clovis caches, Clovis lithic technology, mobility, and land use.

May

288 pp. Also of Interest 8.5 x 11 28 halftones, 27 figs., El Mirón Cave, Cantabrian Spain Obsidian and Ancient 20 maps, 27 charts, 49 tables The Site and Its Holocene Archaeo- Manufactured Glasses $75.00s cloth logical Record Edited by Ioannis Liritzis and !"#$ 978-0-8263-5482-2 Edited by Lawrence Guy Straus Christopher M. Stevenson $87.50 CAD and Manuel R. Gonzáles Morales $75.00s cloth 978-0-8263-5159-3 e-*(12 978-0-8263-5483-9 $75.00s cloth 978-0-8263-5148-7

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 57 ANTHROPOLOGY • ARCHAEOLOGY

-#&81"1 &*5'1"2#/ is an associate professor of an- thropology at the University of Winnipeg. '7%#41 -%"2*"<1 2% '*!61 is a professor of pub- lic health at Fundacão Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro. '13#"% %99%&' is an associate professor of biology at the Universidade de São Paulo. -%971" 3!&/7%44 is an assistant professor of ar- chaeology at Memorial University of Newfoundland. 21"#%41 54*54%& is an associate professor of archae- ology at the Universidade Federal de Sergipe.

The Cultural Dynamics of Shell-Matrix Sites %2#(%2 3) -#&81"1 &*5'1"2#/, '7%#41 -%"2*"<1 2% '*!61, '13#"% %99%&', -%971" 3!&/7%44, ; 21"#%41 54*54%&

The excavation of shell middens and mounds is an important source of information regarding past human diet, settlement, technology, and paleoenvironments. The con- tributors to this book introduce new ways to study shell-matrix sites, ranging from the geochemical analysis of shellfish to the interpretation of human remains buried within. Drawing upon examples from around the world, this is one of the only books to offer a global perspective on the archaeology of shell-matrix sites.

May

416 pp. Also of Interest 8.5 x 11 39 halftones, 17 figs., 22 maps, Anthropological Perspectives Laser Ablation-ICP-MS in 38 charts, 63 tables on Technology Archaeological Research $85.00s cloth Edited by Michael Brian Schiffer Edited by Robert J. Speakman and !"#$ 978-0-8263-5456-3 $45.00s paper 978-0-8263-5039-8 Hector Neff $100.00 CAD $100.00s cloth 978-0-8263-3254-7 e-*(12 978-0-8263-5457-0

58 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ANTHROPOLOGY • ARCHAEOLOGY • HISTORY

9&%9*&) %. 1&%'7#1" holds faculty and research appointments at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Ideas, Debates, and Perspectives 7 Empires and Diversity On the Crossroads of Archaeology, Anthropology, and History %2#(%2 3) 9&%9*&) %. 1&%'7#1"

For more than four thousand years, empires have been geographically the largest poli- ties on Earth, and in many respects they have been shaping human past and present in different epochs and on different continents. This book contributes to the de-Westerni- zation of the scholarly criticism of empires and imperialism by exploring the variability in imperial formations and interactions between the conquerors and the conquered, the enormous diversity in existing data, and the imperative to develop interdisciplinary research in order to construct adequate interpretations.

July 2013

272 pp. Also of Interest 6 x 9 Life at Home in the Twenty-First 70 figs., 6 tables Classic Maya Political Ecology Century $49.95s paper Resource Management, Class 32 Families Open Their Doors !"#$ 978-0-917956-34-8 Histories, and Political Change in Jeanne E. Arnold, Anthony P. $57.50 CAD Northwestern Belize Graesch, Enzo Ragazzini, and )7' 23)"'$ !$")!)()' Edited by Jon C. Lohse Elinor Ochs 3+ 4*274'3,358 0*'"" $67.00s paper 978-1-931745-70-3 $24.95 cloth 978-1-931745-61-1

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 59 ARCHAEOLOGY

14%.%# $&1"#/7 holds a faculty and administrative appointment at the University of California, Los Angeles. 13#91#4 &. 4%$#"% is an academic affiliate of the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology and a lecturer in the Department of Anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Monographs 77 Advances in Titicaca Basin Archaeology–- %2#(%2 3) 14%.%# $&1"#/7 ; 13#91#4 &. 4%$#"%

This volume, the second in a series of studies on the archaeology of the Titicaca Ba- sin, serves as an excellent springboard for broader discussions of the roles of ritual, authority, coercion, and the intensification of resources and trade for the development of archaic states worldwide. Over the last hundred years, scholars have painstakingly pieced together fragments of the incredible cultural history of the Titicaca Basin, an area that encompasses over 50,000 km2, achieving a basic understanding of settlement patterns and chronology. While large-scale surveys will need to continue and areas will need to be revisited to further refine chronologies and knowledge of site-formation processes, the maturation of the field now allows archaeologists to fruitfully invest energy in single locations and specialized topics.

September 2013

224 pp. Also of Interest 8.5 x 11 126 figs., 19 tables Advances in Titicaca Basin $65.00s cloth Archaeology–1 !"#$ 978-1-931745-72-7 Edited by Charles Stanish, Amanda $75.00 CAD Cohen, and Mark Aldenderfer )7' 23)"'$ !$")!)()' $9.98s paper 978-1-931745-15-4 3+ 4*274'3,358 0*'""

60 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ARCHAEOLOGY • ANTHROPOLOGY • HISTORY

14%.%# $&1"#/7 holds a faculty and administrative appointment at the University of California, Los Angeles. /71&4%' '(1"#'7 holds the Lloyd Cotsen Chair in Archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Monographs 78 Visions of Tiwanaku %2#(%2 3) 14%.%# $&1"#/7 ; /71&4%' '(1"#'7

“What was Tiwanaku?” was the question posed to a select group of scholars that gath- ered for an intensive two-day conference at the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles. For over half a millennium, the megalithic ru- ins in the highlands of the Andes Mountains have stood as proxy for the desires and ambitions of different empires and political agendas; in the last hundred years, schol- ars have attempted to answer this question by interpreting the shattered remains from a distant pre-literate past. This volume contains twelve papers from senior scholars whose contributions dis- cuss subjects from the farthest points of the southern Andes. Visions of Tiwanaku stays true to its name by providing a platform for each scholar to present an informed view on the nature of this enigmatic place that seems so familiar, yet continues to disap- point by falling outside our established models for early city and state.

November 2013

304 pp. Also of Interest 8.5 x 11 108 halftones, 6 tables The Dead Tell Tales The History of the Peoples of the $75.00s cloth Essays in Honor of Jane E. Buikstra Eastern Desert !"#$ 978-0-917956-09-6 $87.50 CAD Edited by María Cecilia Lozada Edited by Hans Barnard and Kim and Barra O’Donnabhain Duistermaat )7' 23)"'$ !$")!)()' $77.00s cloth 978-1-931745-96-3 3+ 4*274'3,358 0*'"" $84.00s cloth 978-1-931745-68-0

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 61 ARCHAEOLOGY • ANTHROPOLOGY • HISTORY

&#/71&2 9. 4%'!&% is a professor of anthropol- ogy at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles.

Monumenta Archaeologica 33 Formative Lifeways in Central Tlaxcala, Volume . Excavations, Ceramics, and Chronology %2#(%2 3) &#/71&2 9. 4%'!&%

This book, the first of a projected three, reports on excavations at Formative-period sites in the state of Tlaxcala, Mexico. The transition to the Formative in the relatively high-altitude study region is later than in choice regions for early agriculture else- where in Mesoamerica. From 900 BC, however, population growth and sociopolitical development were rapid. A central claim in the research presented here is that a mac- roregional perspective is essential for understanding the local Formative sequence. In this volume, excavations at three village sites (Amomoloc, Tetel, and Las Mesitas) and one modest regional center (La Laguna) are reported. Ceramics are described in detail. An innovative approach to the classification of figurines is presented, and a Formative chronology for the region is proposed based on seriation of refuse contexts and radio- carbon dates.

January

368 pp. Also of Interest 8.5 x 11 254 halftones, 27 tables Settlement and Subsistence in $75.00s cloth Early Formative Soconusco !"#$ 978-1-931745-69-7 El Varal and the Problem of Inter- $87.50 CAD Site Assemblage Variation )7' 23)"'$ !$")!)()' Edited by Richard G. Lesure 3+ 4*274'3,358 0*'"" $85.00s cloth 978-1-931745-78-9 $55.00s paper 978-1-931745-79-6

62 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 ARCHAEOLOGY • ANTHROPOLOGY • HISTORY

&*2%&#/5 3. /1-03%44 is an assistant professor of East Asian archaeology and history at the Insti- tute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University.

Monographs 79 Archaeology of the Chinese Bronze Age From Erlitou to Anyang %2#(%2 3) &*2%&#/5 3. /1-03%44

Archaeology of the Chinese Bronze Age is a synthesis of recent Chinese archaeological work on the 2nd millennium BCE—the period associated with China’s first dynas- ties and East Asia’s first “states.” Focused on Early China’s great metropolitan centers in the Central Plains and their hinterlands, this work attempts to contextualize them within their wider zones of interaction from the Yangtze to the edge of the Mongolian steppe, and from the Yellow Sea to the Tibetan plateau and the Gansu corridor. This book critically presents the current state of Chinese archaeology on the second mil- lennium BCE in a way that brings to English readers the complexity of Early Chinese culture history, the variety and development of its urban formations, and the larger context of Central Plains Civilization.

January

208 pp. Also of Interest 8.5 x 11 95 halftones, 8 tables Chinese Society in the Age of $55.00s paper Confucius (1000–250 BC) !"#$ 978-1-931745-98-7 The Archaeological Evidence $65.00 CAD Lothar von Falkenhausen )7' 23)"'$ !$")!)()' $69.00s cloth 978-1-931745-31-4 3+ 4*274'3,358 0*'"" $32.95s paper 978-1-931745-30-7

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 63 ARCHAEOLOGY • ANTHROPOLOGY • HISTORY

#1" 7*22%&, Fellow of the British Academy since 1996, is the Dunlevie Family Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Stanford University.

Monumenta Archaeologica 29 Monumenta Archaeologica 30

Çatalhöyük Excavations Humans and Landscapes The 2000–2008 Seasons: Çatalhöyük of Çatalhöyük Research Project Volume 7 Reports from the 2000–2008 Seasons: %2#(%2 3) #1" 7*22%& Çatalhöyük Research Project Volume 8 Çatalhöyük Excavations presents the re- %2#(%2 3) #1" 7*22%& sults of the excavations that took place This volume in the Çatalhöyük series at the site from 2000 to 2008, when the reports on the results of excavations main aim was to understand the social from 2000 to 2008 that have provided a geography of the settlement, its layout wealth of new data on the ways in which and social organization. Excavation, re- the Çatalhöyük settlement and environ- cording, and sampling methodologies are ment were occupied. A complex picture discussed as well as dating, “levels,” and emerges of a relatively decentralized the grouping of buildings into social sec- society, large in size but small-scale in tors. The description of excavated units, terms of organization, dwelling within a features, and buildings incorporates re- mosaic patchwork of environments. sults from the analyses of animal bone, chipped stone, groundstone, shell, ceram- ics, phytoliths, and micromorphology.

North American Distribution Rights Only

February September 2013 The Cotsen Institute 712 pp. 544 pp. of Archaeology Press 8.5 x 11 8.5 x 11 PUBLISHED IN ASSOCIATION 640 halftones, 20 tables, 1 CD 430 halftones, 124 tables, 1 CD WITH THE BRITISH INSTITUTE $89.00s cloth $89.00s cloth OF ARCHAEOLOGY AT ANKARA !"#$ 978-1-898249-29-0 !"#$ 978-1-898249-30-6 $105.00 CAD $105.00 CAD

64 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 Monumenta Archaeologica 31 Monumenta Archaeologica 32

Substantive Technologies Integrating Çatalhöyük at Çatalhöyük Themes from the 2000–2008 Seasons: Çatalhöyük Research Project Volume 10 Reports from the 2000–2008 Seasons: Çatalhöyük Research Project Volume 9 %2#(%2 3) #1" 7*22%& %2#(%2 3) #1" 7*22%& This volume discusses general themes that have emerged in the analysis and The ways in which humans became in- interpretation of the results of excava- creasingly engaged in their material envi- tions from 2000 to 2008, synthesizing ronment, such that “things” came to play the results of research described in other an active force in their lives, is the subject volumes in the same series. It examines of this volume in the Çatalhöyük series. the social organization at Çatalhöyük, its changes over time, along with the wider

available May social, economic, and ritural evolution 4-Volume Set of the society found in the recent exca- vations. Çatalhöyük 2000–2008 Research Reports Volumes 7–10 $299.00s cloth 978-1-898249-33-7 North American Distribution Rights Only $350.00 CAD November 2013 May 544 pp. 304 pp. 8.5 x 11 8.5 x 11 405 halftones, 99 tables, 1 CD 400 halftones, 50 tables, 1 CD $89.00s cloth $69.00s cloth !"#$ 978-1-898249-31-3 !"#$ 978-1-898249-32-0 $105.00 CAD $80.00 CAD

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 65 '%4%/(%2 '/7*41&4) 31/54#'(

African American History The American Military Beyond the Eagle’s Shadow in New Mexico Frontiers New Histories of Latin Portraits from The United States Army in America’s Cold War Five Hundred Years the West, 1783–1900 %2#(%2 3) %2#(%2 3) 3&!/% 1. 941'&!2 &*3%&( ,**'(%& $#&9#"#1 91&&1&2-3!&"%((, $29.95( ','#$ $29.95( ','#$ -1&5 1(,**2 41,&%"/%, ; 8!4#* %. -*&%"* *(12 978-0-8263-5301-6 *(12 978-0-8263-3844-0 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5302-3 #-*(12 978-0-8263-3845-7 $55.00( /+."- *(12 978-0-8263-5368-9 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5369-6

Fractal Architecture Global West, John Gaw Meem at Acoma Organic Design Philosophy in American Frontier The Restoration of San Esteban Theory and Practice Travel, Empire, and Exception- del Rey Mission 81-%' 71&&#' alism from Manifest Destiny 51(% ,#"9%&(-041)2*" to the Great Depression $75.00( ','#$ $40.00( /+."- 21$#2 -. ,&*3%4 *(12 978-0-8263-5201-9 *(12 978-0-8263-5209-5 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5202-6 $39.95( /+."- #-*(12 978-0-8263-5211-8 *(12 978-0-8263-5370-2 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5371-9

66 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 800–249–7737 '%4%/(%2 '/7*41&4) 31/54#'(

Masculinity and Sexuality New Mexico’s Spanish Protecting Yellowstone in Modern Mexico Livestock Heritage Science and the Politics of %2#(%2 3) Four Centuries of Animals, National Park Management $:/(*& -. -1/:1'-9*"6B4%6 Land, and People -#/71%4 8. )*/7#- ; 1""% &!3%"'(%#" ,#44#1- ,. 2!"-#&% $55.00( /+."- $31.95( ','#$ $34.95( /+."- *(12 978-0-8263-5303-0 *(12 978-0-8263-2905-9 *(12 978-0-8263-5089-3 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5304-7 #-*(12 978-0-8263-2906-6 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5091-6

The Riddle of Cantinflas The Roots of Conservatism The Suppressed Memoirs Essays on Hispanic in Mexico of Mabel Dodge Luhan Popular Culture Catholicism, Society, and Sex, Syphilis, and Psycho- Revised and Expanded Edition Politics in the Mixteca Baja, analysis in the Making of #41" '(1$1"' 1750–1962 Modern American Culture 3%"81-#" (. '-#(7 %2#(%2 3) 4*#' 0145%" $27.95( ','#$ &!2"#/5 *(12 978-0-8263-5256-9 $34.95( ','#$ #-*(12 978-0-8263-5257-6 *(12 978-0-8263-5172-2 $34.95( /+."- #-*(12 978-0-8263-5173-9 *(12 978-0-8263-5119-7 #-*(12 978-0-8263-5121-0

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2015 Enchanting New Mexico Calendar 23 The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press 2015 New Mexico Artist Calendar 23 59–63 The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press Advances in Titicaca Basin Archaeology—2 60 published in association with the British African American History in New Mexico 66 Institute of Archaeology at Ankara 64–65 Alegría, Claribel 21 Cristino, Claudio 34 The Allure of Turquoise, Second Edition 22 The Cultural Dynamics of Shell-Matrix Sites American Blood 16 58 The American Military Frontiers 66 Anasazi America, Second Edition 31 Dahlquist, Robert E. 52 An Archaeology of Architecture 34 The Deportation of Wopper Barraza 15 Archaeology of the Chinese Bronze Age 63 Detonography 34 Areshian, Gregory E. 59 Dunmire, William W. 67 An Army Doctor on the Western Frontier 29 Averill, Thomas Fox 35 Easter Island’s Silent Sentinels 34 Ebright, Malcolm 44 Benito de la Torre, Juan 47 Eggers, Sabine 58 Beyond the Eagle’s Shadow 66 An Elegy for September 17 Bloomfield, Debra 4–7 Emotions and Daily Life in Colonial Mexico 50 Bonnell, Françoise Barnes 34 Empires and Diversity 59 Boyden, Linda 34 Espinosa, David 53 Bullis, Ronald Kevin 34 Burchell, Meghan 58 Feldman, Dede 26–27 Buswell, Richard S. 34 Flint, Richard 32 Butterfield, Mike 8–10 Formative Lifeways in Central Tlaxcala, Volume 1 62 Caffey, David L. 28 Four Square Leagues 44 Campbell, Roderick B. 63 Fractal Architecture 66 Capturing the Women’s Army Corps 34 FrescoBooks / SF Design, llc 24–25 Çatalhöyük 2000–2008 Research Reports Volumes 7–10 65 Gale, Kate 19 Çatalhöyük Excavations 64 Gandert, Miguel A. 35 Chasing the Santa Fe Ring 28 García, David 42 Chilton, Noël 35 García, Nasario 35 Church, Elizabeth Comfort 35 Garrard-Burnett, Virginia 66 Church, Peggy Pond 35 Giveaways 34 Clements, William M. 45 Glasrud, Bruce A. 66 Close to Home 34 Global West, American Frontier 66 Clovis Caches 57 The Goldilocks Zone 19 Cook-Romero, Elizabeth 24–25 Gómez-Quiñones, Juan 40 Córdova, Amy 35 Gossen, Gary H. 47 Cormac McCarthy 18 Grandma’s Santo on Its Head 35 Grieco, Viviana L. 51

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Harris, James 66 Lilley, James D. 18 Hendricks, Rick 44 Lipsett-Rivera, Sonya 50 Hernández, Francisca Hernández 47 Loeffler, Jack 43 Hernández, Socorro Gómez 47 Herrera, Spencer R. 35 Macías-González, Víctor M. 67 Highsmith, Robert 23 Making Aztlán 40 Hispanic Folk Music of New Mexico and the Martín-Rodríguez, Manuel M. 41 Southwest 43 Masculinity and Sexuality in Modern Mexico Hodder, Ian 64, 65 67 Hoffman, Abraham 13 Mayan Tales from Chiapas, Mexico 47 Hotel Mariachi 35 Maya Pilgrimage to Ritual Landscapes 46 Houle, Marcy Cottrell 12 McCarty, Sarah 24–25 Huckell, Bruce B. 57 Meaningful Places 14 Hughes, Richard W. 44 Meléndez, A. Gabriel 35 Humans and Landscapes of Çatalhöyük 64 Melinda Miles 24–25 Mendonça de Souza, Sheila 58 Imagining Geronimo 45 Merrill, C. S. 20 Inside the New Mexico Senate 26–27 Mono Lake 13 Integrating Çatalhöyük 65 Montoya, Maceo 15 Moreno, Julio E. 66 A Jesuit Missionary in Eighteenth-Century Murphy, Lawrence R. 33 Sonora 52 Jesuit Student Groups, the Universidad Native Brazil 48 Iberoamericana, and Political Resistance in New Mexican Folk Music/Cancionero del Folklor Mexico, 1913–1979 53 Nuevomexicano 42 John Gaw Meem at Acoma 66 New Mexico Magazine 22–23 Jones, Halbert 54 New Mexico’s High Peaks 8–10 Julyan, Robert 8–10 New Mexico’s Spanish Livestock Heritage 67 New Scholarly 36–65 Kaiser, Robert 35 New Trade 2–33 Kilby, J. David 57 Nichols, John 16, 17 Klokler, Daniela 58 No Settlement, No Conquest 32 Knowing History in Mexico 55 Kurland, Catherine L. 35 O’Keeffe 20 Otherness 21 Lamadrid, Enrique R. 35, 42, 43 Langfur, Hal 48–49 The Paiz Family 35 Laughlin, Robert M. 47 Palka, Joel W. 46 Lawrence, Mark Atwood 66 The Pancake Stories 35 The Legend of Ponciano Gutiérrez and the Parent, Laurence 23 Mountain Thieves 35 Philmont 33 Lesure, Richard G. 62 Phister, Monty 24–25 Levine, Abigail R. 60

800–249–7737 !"#$%&'#() *+ "%, -%.#/* 0&%'' 69 The Politics of Giving in the Viceroyalty of Rio de Vigil, Cipriano Frederico 42 la Plata 51 Villa-Flores, Javier 50 A Prehistory of Western North America 56 Visions of Tiwanaku 61 Protecting Yellowstone 67 Vranich, Alexi 60, 61

Renfro, Yelizaveta P. 11 The War Has Brought Peace to Mexico 54 The Riddle of Cantinflas 67 West End Press 21 Robb, John Donald 43 Wilderness 4–7 Roksandic, Mirjana 58 Williams, Terry Tempest 4–7 Romero, Levi 35 Wingert-Playdon, Kate 66 The Roots of Conservatism in Mexico 67 Wings for My Flight 12 Rosenberg, Evelyn 34 With a Book in Their Hands 41 Rubenstein, Anne 67 With Our Eyes Wide Open 21 Rudnick, Lois Palken 67 Wooster, Robert 66 Wrobel, David M. 66 Sagrado 35 Sailor, Rachel McLean 14 Xylotheque 11 The Science of Soccer 38–39 Secrets of the Tsil Café 35 Yochim, Michael J. 67 Selected Scholarly Backlist 66–67 Selected Trade Backlist 34–35 Zimmt, Werner S. 52 Shaul, David Leedom 56 Smith, Benjamin T. 67 Stack, Trevor 55 Stanish, Charles 61 Stavans, Ilan 67 Stuart, David E. 30–31 Photography Credits Substantive Technologies at Çatalhöyük 65 front cover: Debra Bloomfield, 10453–5 The Suppressed Memoirs of Mabel Dodge Luhan inside front cover: Debra Bloomfield, 11399–8 67 pages 2–3: Debra Bloomfield, 03506–6 Taylor, John 38–39 page 4: Debra Bloomfield, 38056–6 Tedlock, Dennis 34 page 7: Debra Bloomfield, 34713–5 Thompson, Raymond H. 52 page 10: courtesy Mike Butterfield Thomson, Eric 24–25 page 25: detail, Passing Through, 2002, acrylic on Treister, Kenneth 34 panel, 12.5 x 14 inches. Trotter, John 34 page 27: courtesy Cliff Rees page 30: courtesy NPS, Collection 0028/006.002, Negative 77708 Utley, Robert M. 29 pages 36–37: courtesy Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Valentine, Doug 21 page 39: courtesy Jess Isaiah Levin Vargas Casanova, Patricia 34 page 48: courtesy The Catholic University, Oliveira Vásquez, Irene 40 Lima Library, Washington, D.C. Vigil, Arnold 22

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