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Books in Pas贸 Por Aqu铆 Series in the Nuevomexicano Literary Heritage series

  • Amadito and the Hero Children: Amadito y los Ninos Heroes

    Enrique R. Lamadrid, Amy C贸rdova

    Hardcover (University of New Mexico Press, Nov. 16, 2011)
    Recent health scares such as H1N1 influenza have exposed children to frightening information that can be difficult to process. This thoughtful bilingual book helps them understand the abstract concept of largescale sickness and appreciate the role children play in the health of their community. It introduces young readers to a fascinating aspect of southwest history, and invites discussion of folk medicine and science, while also addressing children's curiosities and fears. Recounting the two most deadly epidemics to strike the Southwest--smallpox in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and influenza during World War I--this beautifully illustrated narrative reveals that with tragedy comes heroism, as demonstrated by the children who bravely transported the smallpox vaccine from Mexico's interior to New Mexico in 1805. Through the eyes of the protagonist Jos茅 Amado "Amadito" Dom铆nguez--a real child of the flu epidemic era who would later become Taos County's first nuevomexicano physician--folklorist Lamadrid weaves together culture, history, mortality, and hope into a life-affirming lesson.<>/p>
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  • The Legend of Ponciano Guti茅rrez and the Mountain Thieves

    A. Gabriel Mel茅ndez, The Paiz Family, Amy C贸rdova

    Paperback (University of New Mexico Press, June 1, 2013)
    Once upon a time in the Mora Valley of northern New Mexico there lived a farmer named Ponciano Guti茅rrez. On a trip through the mountains he was taken captive by Vicente Silva and his gang of bank robbers. This tale of Ponciano's quick-witted escape has been a bedtime story for generations in the Paiz family. New Mexico authors at the turn of the last century published many accounts of the crimes of Vicente Silva. This book is the first to present a Silva legend that has been kept alive by families in Mora since the 1890s. The Paiz family version is presented in English with a Spanish translation by A. Gabriel Mel茅ndez.
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