New Mexican Lives: Profiles and Historical Stories by Richard W. Etulain


New Mexican Lives: Profiles and Historical Stories
Title : New Mexican Lives: Profiles and Historical Stories
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0826324339
ISBN-10 : 9780826324337
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 344
Publication : First published February 1, 2002

In New Mexican Lives, Richard Etulain and a distinguished group of twelve collaborators re-interpret the state's history through biography. Profiles of fourteen notable, complex characters provide a unique view into New Mexico's development from prehistoric times to the present. Here are lives of men and women that illustrate memorable from Popé and the Pueblo Revolt to Spanish colonizers Juan de Oñate and Diego de Vargas; from Hispanic widows exercising their property rights to Billy the Kid and the shoot-out in Lincoln; from Mabel Dodge Luhan and her avant-garde, idealistic salon to Senator Dennis Chavez and the exercise of Hispanic political power on a national level. By emphasizing the links between important New Mexicans and their times, this book makes history a personal story of drama and pathos played out within a larger context of pivotal events and formative ideas. For example, we see the contradictory forces compelling Chiricahua Apache Mangas Coloradas to be committed to peace while nevertheless waging ceaseless war on Mexico, Kit Carson's struggle to find a humane way to carry out his duty to wage war on the Navajo, and Susan McSween's valiant and determined effort to modernize a seemingly untamed town.


New Mexican Lives: Profiles and Historical Stories Reviews


  • Elliot Williams

    New Mexican Lives works fairly well as an overview of New Mexico history: it covers all of the major periods, and does a pretty good job of giving time to all of the various peoples of NM. But it doesn’t work as a collection of biographies. Because it’s so committed to telling the whole story of NM, most chapters end up spending more time on the history of the period than on the ostensible subject of the biography. And while I occasionally would have liked actual footnotes to sources, the “essay on sources” at the end of each chapter was really helpful for finding other books to read.