The best guide to exploring the Ancient City in depth, on walking, running and bicycling tours through narrow streets and broad vistas. Pinkerton shares the stories behind the churches, monuments and neighborhoods. "This is a wonderful book. The fine text will not only provide route information and plenty of background historical material but a pleasurable reading experience as well." --Going Places: The Guide to Travel Guides
An entertaining reference on regional literature for residents and visitors alike, this guidebook presents familiar landmarks in a new light, revealing the stories of legendary and historical figures who have lived in and written about the ...
Santa Fe on Foot: Exploring the City Different
The useful Resources section includes contact information for many of the museums, festivals, activities, and recreation areas of Santa Fe. This book is a wonderful introduction as well as a souvenir to Santa Fe's many charms, and will be a ...
Authentic Southwestern recipes include: Mexican Corn Chowder from The Pink Adobe Restaurant Carne Adovada from Marie's New Mexican Kitchen Rack of Lamb with Heirloom Bean Ragout from Santecafe Orange-marinated Chicken Fajitas from Santa Fe ...
She was half Indian, the most beautiful and the toughest girl he had ever seen. This is the story of men and women who kept the Santa Fe Trail open in the 1880s, from Westport, Kansas, to Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Tom Davis, a.k.a.
301-2; Keith L. Bryant, Jr., “The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway and the Development of the Taos and Santa Fe Art Colonies,” Western Historical Quarterly (October 1978), pp. 437-453; Victoria E. Dye, All Aboard for Santa Fe, ...
Santa Fe attorney Ed Eagle returns—and so does his past—in this riveting thriller from #1 New York Times bestselling author Stuart Woods.
She pointed with her lips at the dirty water choked with trash as we stood together on the bank of the Milwaukee River. ... in parts of Brazil, the river is sacred to the Goddess Oxum, birth mother, lover, sacred dancer, life-bringer.
In 1839 a journalist for the New Orleans Picayune, Matthew C. Field, joined a company of merchants and tourists headed west on the Santa Fe Trail.