Books written by Ana Pacheco

  • Saints & Seasons: A Guide to New Mexico's Most Popular Saints

    Unos venían en coche , otros en tren , y los demás en avión . Desafortunadamente , ya para 1959 , con la apertura del Interstate 40 , cruzando desde el este al oeste de la ciudad , El Camino 66 empezó a decaer porque ahora había menos ...

  • Estrategias de Enseñanza/Aprendizaje: investigaciones desde el CRINCEF

    ... Universidade Federal do Maranhão, Brasil Raul Inácio Busarello, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brasil Ricardo Luiz de Bittencourt, Universidade do Extremo Sul Catarinense, Brasil Rita Oliveira, Universidade de Aveiro, ...

  • Pueblos of New Mexico

    As early as 1851, photographers journeyed along the arduous Santa Fe Trail on horseback and in covered wagons on a quest to capture the magnificent vistas on film.

  • Legendary Locals of Santa Fe

    Stephen Watts Kearny (1794–1848) Kearny arrived in Santa Fe in 1846 during the MexicanAmerican War. With military precision, he ordered approximately 2,500 troops to take control of New Mexico and surrounding territories.

  • Legendary Locals of Santa Fe

    Legendary Locals of Santa Fe pays tribute to a diverse group of individuals, who through different eras have contributed to the city's vitality: Native American Po'pay, leader of the Pueblo Revolt; world-renowned sculptor Allan Houser; ...

  • A History of Spirituality in Santa Fe: The City of Holy Faith

    Santa Fe city historian Ana Pacheco documents the rich religious and spiritual history of this high-mountain metaphysical community.

  • Early Santa Fe

    ... Santa Fe's better-known people who made history won't be found in this book because I have already written about them in Legendary Locals of Santa Fe, which Arcadia published in 2013. Also, some aspects of Santa Fe history have been ...

  • J. Paul Taylor: The Man from Mesilla

    One of the best-kept secrets of the art world is that important center of postwar modernism: Taos, New Mexico.

  • Pueblos of New Mexico

    As early as 1851, photographers journeyed along the arduous Santa Fe Trail on horseback and in covered wagons on a quest to capture the magnificent vistas on film.