An introduction to the sun as a renewable energy source, demonstrating through simple experiments and craft projects how the sun's light and heat can be used to help us in our everyday lives
In 2004 UNESCO launched the Creative Cities Network initiative, which was intended to foster discussion and programs to help cities showcase and support local cultural activities on a global platform.
Melzer (history, U. of New Mexico-Valencia Campus) takes readers on a journey to famous gravesites important to New Mexico history, such as those for Billy the Kid, Kit Carson, Elfego Baca, Mabel Dodg
In this first volume (two are planned), Reily describes O'Keeffe's (1887-1986) early years and formative influences, how she defied the conventions of her time to become an artist, and what led her to
Clay Walker's Navajo community and family feel he should integrate into the white world to avoid defeat by that world when he gets older, and although he has a rough start, he finds a place for himsel
This facsimile of the 1940 biography on Father Anton Docher, an important figure in colonial New Mexico history, focuses on his life serving in the Isleta Pueblo from 1891 to his death in 1928. Kelehe
Keleher was a lawyer and journalist who loved to research and write about his native New Mexico, and this reprint of his 1969 memoirs explores his dealings with politicians, businessmen and the evolut
This work features 12 plans for building adobe homes in modern and traditional styles, which can be expanded to fit readers' own budgets, family sizes, style preferences, and building sites. After a b
Undistracted by recordings or notes, Pijoan listened to the stories being told until she could tell them herself. The 17 myths from Native Americans across the US portray creation from the sky, from t
On the day he enters Kennedy High in Manhattan wearing a patch over one eye, sixteen-year-old Horace Hobart is urged to join the toughest gang at school.
Collects excerpts from the diaries and journals of 16 travellers on the north branch of the trail from Santa Fe, New Mexico to Crescent Junction, Utah. The entries range in time from the account of th