The Open Love Letter from the King of Nuevo Mexico

by M Avery


Formats

Softcover
$15.95
E-Book
$5.95
Softcover
$15.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 16/04/2010

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 73
ISBN : 9781450074957
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 73
ISBN : 9781450074964

About the Book

“Only one European had ever gained entrance into the Crystal Cave and lived. He had been accepted many years before after a great battle, and after he had shape shifted into hummingbird’s form avoiding coyote’s fangs and Eagle’s claws in the most deadly game on earth, just in case you think that the shamans sitting in an astro-planned circle got there by watching Disney cartoons. Just checking.”—from Sojourn in the land of the Sun; the Romance of Tim Doughty Tim Doughty, a Northwest Coast journalist and recent transplant to the New Mexican community, seeks both solace and advice from an elderly Hispanic Norteno friend during a brief separation from his wife Teresa. During numerous visits within Joseph and Sophie’s old adobe casa, the two men navigate the major issues of our times. Joseph instructs Tim how to build the House of Love. Tim has discovered his elderly friend is none other than the hidden ruler, the King of the Old Nuevo Mexico Territory. We need to get back to the basics on how we run our society: God and family and mutual respect.—Eric Villanueva PROPHECY / PERSONAL TRANSFORMATION / FAMILY AND PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS


About the Author

Born in the Alaskan Territory in 1954, M Avery attended St. John’s College of Santa Fe (1972) on scholarship before graduating from University of New Mexico, 1980. After ranching and farming in Monticello Canyon, Quemado, Clines Corners, and along the San Juan River, Avery continued teaching in public, tribal and college programs. Eventually traveling the width and breadth of the Nuevo Mexico territory, Avery now lives and works in Taos, focusing on spiritual and political encounters between the New Mexican tri-cultural peoples. The author emphasizes the peoples’ unified response to the Nuevo Mexico vastness and our on-going struggle to become one community out of great diversity.