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Tales from the Journey of the Dead Alan Boye

Tales from the Journey of the Dead By Alan Boye

Tales from the Journey of the Dead by Alan Boye


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Summary

Takes us on a journey of the mind through the past of south-central New Mexico. This work introduces us to travelers who have tested the desert - mysterious ancient people who built cliff-top fortresses, Spanish conquistadors, old time cowboys yodeling classical poetry to their cattle, and modern range managers tracking livestock by satellite.

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Tales from the Journey of the Dead Summary

Tales from the Journey of the Dead: Ten Thousand Years on an American Desert by Alan Boye

One hundred miles south of Albuquerque, two parallel chains of mountains isolate a 120-mile jumble of black rock, dry lake beds, flesh-colored sand, and desolation. This is the Jornada del Muerto, the Journey of the Dead. So named because of a particular death centuries ago, this desert has witnessed many tales of loss and destruction. Alan Boye takes us on a trek through the beauty and violence of this forbidding land. Traveling the wasteland by foot, Boye visits battle sites from the Mexican-American War, to the Civil War, from the lonely canyon where the Apaches fought to keep their homeland, to the isolated site of the world's first atomic explosion. In the sand and dust and the ruins of war, Boye discovers stories of sadistic killers, directionless rebels, and gun-toting gauchos-but also tales of poets and dreamers, of ordinary men and women who lived their lives and continue to live under this wide and ruthless desert sky. He introduces us to many travelers who have tested the desert: mysterious ancient people who built cliff-top fortresses, Spanish conquistadors, Mexican farmers, old time cowboys yodeling classical poetry to their cattle, and modern range managers tracking livestock by satellite. This is the story of an American desert told through the eyes of those who knew it best and brought to life through Boye's own travels across the Journey of the Dead.

Tales from the Journey of the Dead Reviews

This unique book doubles as the first impressionistic 'naturalistic' overview, and, at least in part, the first history of the region. The Jornada del Muerto is an awesome piece of land that cries out for lyrical description and Boye's writing is well worthy of the region that it describes.-Ferenc Morton Szasz, author of Larger Than Life: New Mexico in the Twentieth Century -- Ferenc Morton Szasz This collection of oral histories and archival studies is a refreshing examination of the role that New Mexico has played, and continues to play, in the history of the United States as a multiethnic quest for happiness, opportunity, and at times, greed. The Jornada del Muerto as a place holds a unique image in the mythic vision of New Mexicans and Tales from the Journey of the Dead shows the complexities of the place.-Ricardo L. Garcia, author of Brother Bill's Bait Bites Back and Other Tales from the Raton -- Ricardo L. Garcia Firsthand accounts are aptly balanced by personal histories and thorough research... With wonderfully accessible and consistently engaging writing, Boye adds a long-overlooked and essential piece to the puzzle of American history.-Booklist -- Janet St. John Booklist Each of the nineteen chronologically arranged chapters comprising Tales from the Journey of the Dead is a stand-alone narrative, but read one after the other as Boye arranged them and they proffer a well-rounded and yet particular picture of the Jornada and some of the many people who have passed through its water-poor, sun-scorched expanse, settled there, or died trying (hence the name)... Boye effectively conveys the histories and stories of the desert and of the people he intended to reveal. The book is especially recommended for people planning their own trip to the Jornada del Muerto or who want to know about the region.-H-Environment -- H-Environment H-Environment An entertainingly descriptive read. Boye's interviews with locals who live, work, and play on the Jornada are particularly strong. Their experiences capture the central story of humans dealing with a harsh environment... Tales from the Journey of the Dead can effectively capture the reader's imagination with its impressionistic and descriptive approach to humans eking out an existence on a desert over ten millennia. In other words, when Boye describes life under the burning desert sun, the reader can feel the heat.-New Mexico Historical Review New Mexico Historical Review

About Alan Boye

Alan Boye is a professor of English at Lyndon State College in Lyndonville, Vermont. His many books include Holding Stone Hands: On the Trail of the Cheyenne Exodus (available in a Bison Books edition) and Just Walking the Hills of Vermont.

Table of Contents

1. Traveling the Camino U.S. 380; 2. The Wild Man; 3. Elements; 4. Foundations; 5. Glyph Time; 6. Artifacts; 7. Rowena; 8. The Coming of the Ingles; 9. The Viejo; 10. The Captains of Death and the Young Missouri Bride; 11. Coffee on the Porch of the Bar Cross Ranch; 12. Valverde; 13. The Life and Death of Victorio (On Seeing Apache Plume); 14. Two Writers of the Purple Sage; 15. Virtual Fences and Real Neighbors; 16. Flo Martin Puts Down Her Monkey Wrench; 17. The Georgia Green Story; 18. The Final Walk; 19. Joe

Additional information

CIN0803213581G
9780803213586
0803213581
Tales from the Journey of the Dead: Ten Thousand Years on an American Desert by Alan Boye
Used - Good
Hardback
University of Nebraska Press
20060901
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Tales from the Journey of the Dead