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Mexico - Travel Essays & Descriptions, Mexico - Travel
Sonora: An Intimate Geography by David Yetman β€” book cover

Sonora: An Intimate Geography

by David Yetman, Fesler Susan Hancock
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Overview

Now available in paperback, this informal account of the people, culture, land, and history of Sonora, Mexico, describes blistering deserts, alpine mountains, tropical river valleys, and arid coastlines, and relates the lives and stories of cattlemen, lumbermen, fishermen, weavers, cobblers, musicians, bootleggers, and Indians. The author's curiosity extends to the weaving of NΓ‘cori hats, the distillation of fiery bacanora, and the utility of the tegua, the Sonoran cowboy boot. Sonora is also a record of painful twentieth-century change of human dislocation from rural villages to industrial cities and the relentless destruction of Sonoran forests, jungles, deserts, and rivers. A regular visitor for over thirty years, the author provides a colorful portrait of the Sonora of the past, present, and future.

Synopsis

This informal account of the people, culture, land, and history of Sonora, Mexico, is now available in paperback.

About the Author, David Yetman

David Yetman is an assistant research social scientist at the University of Arizona Southwest Center in Tucson. He is the host of the PBS program "The Desert Speaks."

Virgil Hancock III is a photographer living in Arizona.

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Book Details

Published
November 1, 1999
Publisher
University of New Mexico Press
Pages
264
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780826321848

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