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Behind the Mountains by Oliver La Farge — book cover

Behind the Mountains

by Oliver La Farge
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Overview

Imagine yourself in a secluded green valley high in the mountains of northern New Mexico. You are one of a large family who own a sheep and cattle ranch surrounding the little village of Rociada. Your father, a Spaniard, is the revered and distinguished José Baca, and your mother, Doña Marguerite, is of French descent. Everyone in the village loves and respects your family as their patrones, appealing to them in times of trouble and bringing them gifts at Christmas. Out of the everyday life of the Baca family, the village people, their customs and superstitions, Oliver La Farge has drawn, for example, the touching story of young Pino's disillusionment with his hero, the horse thief Pascual. Or there is the account of the wedding shoes that pinched until the bride was in tears. Then there is Carmen's discovery of treachery in the unlit hovel of the blind religious and the amusing tale of how Pino was punished for his arrogance the night the Archbishop came to dinner. But beneath this rippling surface of adventure, tenderness, and humor rides the gradual encroachment of the outside world on Rociada, one of the last survivals of the ancient Spanish way of life in the United States. Finally, this idyllic village succumbs to the invasion of tourists and the machine, and Rociada becomes only a dream of the past. Born in 1901, Oliver Hazard Perry La Farge is ranked among the literary lions of Southwestern letters. Since he died in 1963, his reputation has continued to grow and new honors have been added to his name. "Laughing Boy," a novel of Navajo life, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1930, putting his name in lights before he was 30. Of his many books, "Behind the Mountains" has earned the affection of Santa Feans and New Mexicans, who continue to regard the book as a regional classic. Santa Fe has changed a great deal-more than most people are prepared to acknowledge-since Oliver La Farge died. The small-town atmosphere with "its warmth and rewards" he often spoke of and admired is swiftly becoming a thing of the past. But with his name appropriately enshrined over the doorway of a library in Santa Fe, perhaps the Modern Age will not be inclined to forget his love for the city and for the people of the American Southwest.

Synopsis

With the powerful simplicity that characterizes the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Laughing Boy, Oliver La Farge depicts the colorful and true accounts of the enchanting life of his wife Consuelo Baca and her family on a sprawling sheep ranch in the 1920's. Set in a valley nestled in the mountains of Northern New Mexico, Behind the Mountains is full of lively and poignant anecdotes about the Baca household, the village people, and a New-world Spanish style of life that was ended by the Depression and the encroachment of the outside world.

Publishers Weekly

Most of these stories originally appeared in the New Yorker before they were published in book form in 1956. Based on accounts by La Farge's wife, Consuelo Baca, of her family's 20,000-head sheep ranch in the mountains of Rociada, N.M., this long out-of-print volume is intended, as La Farge says in the foreword, ``to record a fair picture of a way of life that has ceased to exist.'' Indeed, the subject matter-a unique, almost feudal, Spanish-based Southwestern lifestyle that ended with the Depression-is certainly worth tracing. Though overall a charming rendition, La Farge's quaint touch sometimes clouds the scene's engaging particulars, which include tales of a handsome horse thief, a wedding of truly grand proportions and the superstitions of Rociada's mixed Mexican, Spanish and Native American culture. Most provocative is ``The News from Rociada,'' which tells how Canuto, the ``Alabama Negro'' who became part of the Baca household, buys his own small ranch in Rociada after the family loses theirs. Added to this reprint are pictures of the Baca family, biographical information about La Farge (who won the Pulitzer Prize for his 1929 novel, Laughing Boy) and an afterword tracing what happened to the family members-all provided by the couple's son, John Pen La Farge. (Mar.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Most of these stories originally appeared in the New Yorker before they were published in book form in 1956. Based on accounts by La Farge's wife, Consuelo Baca, of her family's 20,000-head sheep ranch in the mountains of Rociada, N.M., this long out-of-print volume is intended, as La Farge says in the foreword, ``to record a fair picture of a way of life that has ceased to exist.'' Indeed, the subject matter-a unique, almost feudal, Spanish-based Southwestern lifestyle that ended with the Depression-is certainly worth tracing. Though overall a charming rendition, La Farge's quaint touch sometimes clouds the scene's engaging particulars, which include tales of a handsome horse thief, a wedding of truly grand proportions and the superstitions of Rociada's mixed Mexican, Spanish and Native American culture. Most provocative is ``The News from Rociada,'' which tells how Canuto, the ``Alabama Negro'' who became part of the Baca household, buys his own small ranch in Rociada after the family loses theirs. Added to this reprint are pictures of the Baca family, biographical information about La Farge (who won the Pulitzer Prize for his 1929 novel, Laughing Boy) and an afterword tracing what happened to the family members-all provided by the couple's son, John Pen La Farge. (Mar.)

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2008
Publisher
Sunstone Press
Pages
228
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780865346765

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