Books

  1. Mayordomo: Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico
    Mayordomo: Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico

  2. Cowboy Corner Conversations
    Cowboy Corner Conversations

  3. The Shameless Diary of an Explorer: A Story of Failure on Mt. McKinley
    The Shameless Diary of an Explorer: A Story of Failure on Mt. McKinley

  4. In the Wilderness : Coming of Age in Unknown Country
    In the Wilderness : Coming of Age in Unknown Country

  5. The Legacy of Luna: The Story of a Tree, a Woman, and the Struggle to Save the Redwoods
    The Legacy of Luna: The Story of a Tree, a Woman, and the Struggle to Save the Redwoods

  6. Hail, Columbia: Robert Gray, John Kendrick and the Pacific Fur Trade (North Pacific Studies, No 19)
    Hail, Columbia: Robert Gray, John Kendrick and the Pacific Fur Trade (North Pacific Studies, No 19)

  7. Owning It All
    Owning It All

  8. The Doing of the Thing: The Brief, Brilliant Whitewater Career of Buzz Holmstrom
    The Doing of the Thing: The Brief, Brilliant Whitewater Career of Buzz Holmstrom

  9. Forty Years on the Frontier: As Seen in the Journals and Reminiscences of Granville Stuart, Gold-Miner, Trader, Merchant, Rancher and Politician
    Forty Years on the Frontier: As Seen in the Journals and Reminiscences of Granville Stuart, Gold-Miner, Trader, Merchant, Rancher and Politician

  10. The Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography (A-F)
    The Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography (A-F)

  11. Hole in the Sky : A Memoir
    Hole in the Sky : A Memoir

  12. Lost and Found: My Life in a Group Marriage Commune (Counterculture Series)
    Lost and Found: My Life in a Group Marriage Commune (Counterculture Series)

  13. The Chickasaw Rancher
    The Chickasaw Rancher

  14. The White Indian Boy: : The Story of Uncle Nick Among the Shoshones
    The White Indian Boy: : The Story of Uncle Nick Among the Shoshones

  15. Songs of the Fluteplayer: Seasons of Life in the Southwest
    Songs of the Fluteplayer: Seasons of Life in the Southwest

  16. More than Petticoats: Remarkable Colorado Women (More than Petticoats Series)
    More than Petticoats: Remarkable Colorado Women (More than Petticoats Series)

  17. Marietta Wetherill: Life With the Navajos in Chaco Canyon
    Marietta Wetherill: Life With the Navajos in Chaco Canyon

  18. Lamy of Santa Fe
    Lamy of Santa Fe

  19. Silence Shattered: An Eyewitness Account of the Columbine Tragedy
    Silence Shattered: An Eyewitness Account of the Columbine Tragedy

  20. Wide Ruins: Memories from a Navajo Trading Post
    Wide Ruins: Memories from a Navajo Trading Post

  21. Troubled Intimacies: A Life in the Interior West
    Troubled Intimacies: A Life in the Interior West

  22. Traplines : Coming Home to Sawtooth Valley
    Traplines : Coming Home to Sawtooth Valley

  23. Legacy of Honor: The Life of Rafael Chacon, a Nineteenth-Century New Mexican
    Legacy of Honor: The Life of Rafael Chacon, a Nineteenth-Century New Mexican

  24. Native State : A Memoir
    Native State : A Memoir

  25. The Hank Weiscamp Story: The Authorized Biography of the Legendary Colorado Horseman
    The Hank Weiscamp Story: The Authorized Biography of the Legendary Colorado Horseman

Mayordomo: Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • 229 pages about cleaning out ditches
  • The best book I ever read!
  • The real New Mexico
  • The acequia system of northern New Mexico
Mayordomo: Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico
Stanley G. Crawford
Manufacturer: Univ of New Mexico Pr
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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Similar Items:
  1. A Garlic Testament: Seasons on a Small New Mexico Farm
  2. The River in Winter: New and Selected Essays
  3. Acequia Culture: Water, Land, and Community in the Southwest
  4. Liberation Ecologies
  5. Dancing with the Virgin: Body and Faith in the Fiesta of Tortugas, New Mexico

ASIN: 0826309992

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars 229 pages about cleaning out ditches.......2006-04-03

Stanley Crawford is not a bad writer. He's not.
But "Mayordomo" is not a good book.
It is EXCRUCIATINGLY boring, and that's coming from someone who is obsessed with New Mexico culture and history, who thoroughly enjoyed Annie Dillard's equally plotless (but much better written) "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek," and who lives right next to a small town known for its acequia--the Spanish name for the ditches that regulate so much of New Mexico's irrigation water and that form this book's subject.
During the time I read this book, it was all I could do to force myself to pick this book up and continue, but because it was related to some research I was doing, I did. I think during the time I read this, I read literally fourteen other books, all books picked up in a desperate effort to read anything but this. It is PAINFUL.
A more high-falutin' type might tell you that this is a book about laboring to maintain the aquatic, agricultural lifeline of a traditional Hispanic town. And it is.
But what that also translates to is that this is a book about cleaning out a ditch: ...removing leaves from the ditch, removing fallen limbs from the ditch, evening off the ditch's sides with a workcrew, arguing with people about cleaning out the ditch, and so on and so forth.
Here, I'll open the book at random to a few spots, and see what comes up.
Page 61: "We pull and pry the branches out with the pitchfork and rake."
Page 185: "The obstacle, a massive tangle of muddy branches and twigs at the fence dividing Jose's and Rupert's fields, proves to be unyielding to my half-hearted efforts."
Page 47: "The ditch banks are high along here and in good condition; there is no need for more than a superficial cleaning."
Page 82: "The channel must be moved back into the hillside a foot or two along seven or eight feet of the bank or whatever will give us enough dirt to fill up the hole and move the channel into firmer ground."
Page 213: "The engineer picks up a sharpened two-by-four stake and writes 'Start Here' in black marker on it, and then he and Hollander place it at the southeast corner of the future structure, next to the trunk of the beaver-felled cottonwood that straddles the ditch, and drive it into the soft sand."
I swear those are all from me just opening the book at random. The ENTIRE book is like that. The whole book is about cleaning and raking and shoveling out ditches!
The prose is dry and unexciting, the plot nonexistent, the characters too numerous and nondescript to keep track of, and to make it all even more pointless, all the names--even the name of the community it's set in--have been changed, so the book doesn't even teach you anything you can apply to a real place.
On the plus side, I did learn some acequia terminology that has come in handy to me here in small town New Mexico--"tareas" and "parciantes" and all that--and it did make me want to volunteer on a ditch cleaning myself just to see what it's really like. And it is one of the only books on its topic.
But overall, it's not worth it. Unless you are the type who just loves really quiet foreign films in which people do nothing but talk, this is not the book for you. There are better books about New Mexico, better books about nature, better books about Hispanic culture, and even better writings by this same author. (I recommend his article on San Antonio, New Mexico. Now THERE's a town with an interesting acequia, complete with armed standoffs between locals and developers.)
Maybe I just have the attention span of a kid raised on MTV, and the (lack of ) sensitivity of a guy who laughs at Quentin Tarantino films, but I still don't think it would have been asking too much of this book to please just not be so incredibly dull, bland, and eventless.
Read this only at your own risk, or to help with your insomnia.

5 out of 5 stars The best book I ever read!.......2006-03-14

I was so taken with A Garlic Testament that I drove my family to New Mexico to see what Crawford was talking about - I didn't discover Mayordomo until I returned to Kansas City - drove back! Two great books! Two great trips!

5 out of 5 stars The real New Mexico.......1999-01-22

Far too many accounts of life in New Mexico are written by people with an agenda, often Anglos who came here to "find themselves" or "get back to the land" and were outraged when they discovered that reality wouldn't cooperate with their fantasies. By contrast, Stanley Crawford arrived with an open mind and integrated his family so successfully into a small, predominantly Hispanic village that he became the "mayordomo" in charge of administering the community's irrigation system. This book recounts his experiences and describes the workings of the community, in which the water system performs an important symbolic function as well as a practical one. It's well written, sometimes almost poetic, and often very funny. I think this and Crawford's "A Garlic Testament" are far and away the best books on life in rural New Mexico, and I recommend both of them unreservedly.

5 out of 5 stars The acequia system of northern New Mexico.......1996-06-17

In "Mayodomo" Stanley Crawford describes his experience as manager of an "acequia" or irrigation ditch system in arid northern New Mexico. The use of acequia-irrigation originated in Spain and was introduced to the desert Southwest by Franciscan monks over 300 years ago. Acequias feed from rivers or larger acequias, and from these larger tributaries water is run through farm land and orchards then back to the main source. Each year a manager (mayordomo) and three commissioners (comisiados) are democratically elected to oversee water rates and insure fair distribution of water to each "parciante" or landowner who farms along the ditch. Acequia association members are historically of Hispanic or Latino descent, so Crawford's anglo heritage creates an interesting viewpoint of an age old tradition. As mayordomo Crawford supervises the annual spring clearing of his association's acequia, determines the amount of water that each parciante will receive, and is partially responcible for record keeping and payrolls. A parciante's share of water is determined by the nature of his plantings and for a larger part, the weather. As manager of his ditch Crawford must also contend with family feuding, annual dues or "delincuencias" and parciantes who "cheat" by diverting water to their lands. Crawford's observations take more into account than the physical labor and political hierarchy associated with the maintenance of an acequia. His words create a meaningful perspective of life among the residents of an old northern New Mexican farming community and his story reveals a group of people that have been chronicled by few writers and generally ignored or forgotten by everyone else. It is a book with literary, anthropological, political, and historical significance. Spanish water laws, established long before state government regulations, support solidarity and insure the parciante's place in the community. Recent land and water legal disputes threaten to undermine an important aspect of life in northern New Mexico, one that keeps these communities together and has done so for hundreds of years.
Mayordomo - Chronicle Of An Acequia In Northern New Mexico
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Mayordomo - Chronicle Of An Acequia In Northern New Mexico
    Stanley Crawford
    Manufacturer: Anchor / Doubleday
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback
    ASIN: B000IWQUDG
    Mayordomo. Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico.
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Mayordomo. Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico.
      Stanley Crawford
      Manufacturer: University of New Mexico Press
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Hardcover
      ASIN: B000I32QCO

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