Friday, May 04, 2012
Colorado Book
Award Finalist
June 24,2011
On
June 24, my brother Christopher, Bob and I traveled to Aspen, CO to participate
in the Colorado Book Awards program of the Colorado Humanities. We were so
honored to be part of the festivities of the 20th annual awards. Being a
finalist was awesome for a first book effort by the illustrator and myself. I
met an author I admire--Laura Resau--whose juvenile books are published by Delacorte
Press. Her book Star in the Forest has an important immigration story
and she signed it for me! She had two books in contention for the award in two
different categories.
Las
Golondrinas, June 25, 2011
Illustrator
Bob (Robert W.) Pacheco and I traveled to Las Golondrinas Living History Museum
in Santa Fe, New Mexico, for their Fiber Arts Festival. The bookstore there
carries the book. We saw the wonderful 300-year-old ranch which includes a
molasses mill, blacksmith shop, schoolhouse and water-powered grist mill. We
met the historical interpreters who donate 700 hours a year to the museum and
teach “colcha” a long-stitch embroidery of wool colored with natural dyes on
hand-woven “sabanilla (woven fabric).”
June
7, 2011 Giant Map: Walking the trail
The
Pikes Peak Library District hired me to do a summer program for them with the
traveling giant map from National Geographic. The kids are sitting on this
amazing 35’ X 60’ map and we walked across the continent from Canada to Mexico
and east to west. It certainly gives one a different perspective of the
continent.
In three presentations, we hosted nearly 150 children of all ages. I showed them
the trade goods and demonstrated how the object--an abalone shell, for
example--moved from the west coast to the Cohokian Mound peoples to Alaskan
natives to the Aztecs in Mexico. We followed the route of the Macaws from their
jungle home in Central America to Casas Grandes, Mesa Verde, and Indiana.
As
an historical interpreter for El Pueblo History Museum in Pueblo, CO, I have
lots of fun at the annual Mercado with colleagues Carol Pickerel and a trader.
Since this photo was taken, a new coat of adobe was applied to our evocation
site and it looks great! As
an historical interpreter for El Pueblo History Museum in Pueblo, CO, I have
lots of fun at the annual Mercado with colleagues Carol Pickerel and a trader.
Since this photo was taken, a new coat of adobe was applied to our evocation
site and it looks great! The photographer is Glori Hyder.
This is the blog for the book Trade on the Taos Mountain Trail. Since 2007, I have become a publisher, published a book, was a finalist for the 2011 Colorado Humanities Book Awards, and traveled widely looking for book buyers. I've also acquired a wonderful friend and illustrator. Without Bob Pacheco, the book would not have been possible. These are our travels on the book trail.