Hoe, Heaven, and Hell: My Boyhood in Rural New Mexico

(Author) (Foreword by)
Available
Product Details
Price
$24.95  $23.20
Publisher
University of New Mexico Press
Publish Date
Pages
360
Dimensions
6.2 X 9.3 X 1.0 inches | 1.2 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780826355652
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

Nasario García has published over thirty books of folklore, poetry, fiction, and children's stories, including No More Bingo, Comadre! Stories (UNM Press).

Marc Simmons is considered New Mexico's historian laureate and has published over forty books on New Mexico history. Simmons is a former Woodrow Wilson Fellow, a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, and in 1993 the King of Spain granted him membership in the knightly Order of Isabela la Católica for his contributions to Spanish colonial history. He resides in Cerrillos, New Mexico.
Reviews

"An excellent collection of folklore and cultural treasures that one can consult over and over again."--New Mexico Historical Review


"Reading Dr. Nasario García's inspiring tome Hoe, Heaven, and Hell: My Boyhood in Rural New Mexico rekindled so many wonderful experiences of growing up in Peñasco and being around matanzas."--nmgastronome.com


"A volume of wondrous stories told through García's gathered remembrances of his early boyhood . . . [and] an insightful profile of the culture of a rural Hispanic New Mexico village in the Río Puerco Valley in the early 1940s."--Albuquerque Journal


"A saga of ranch life, community bonds, the omnipresent threat of drought, and more, Hoe, Heaven, and Hell is the first-person testimony of a traditional way of life that is all but vanished in America today. Highly recommended."--Midwest Book Review


"Hoe, Heaven, and Hell mixes childhood autobiography with poems, common sayings and superstitions, recipes and holiday and wedding menus, lists of garden vegetables and animals raised on the land, and other mundane accountings that are fascinating in their details. It's a rich and revealing account of how rural Hispanic parents raised their offspring, demanding strict obedience from them and forming intense family bonds while finding transcendence in their Catholic faith and survival in their adherence to a strenuous set of daily farm and ranch chores."--Pasatiempo


"There are plenty of good stories in Hoe, Heaven, and Hell . . . all of them told in the spirit of his mother's dicho which serves as one of the epigraphs: 'On this earth there is nothing better than to have a kind heart.' And that, throughout the book, the author displays in abundance."--Southwestern American Literature


"Growing up on the Rio Puerco in the 1940s, Nasario García was part of one of the last generations to experience the strong family and community bonds that made life in rural New Mexican villages possible. His touching recollections of his life through folklore and family history are told with humor and drama."--Frances Levine, coeditor of Telling New Mexico: A New History