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GUATEMALA
More Books
501 Spanish Verbs
Christopher Kendris
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS
2010
PAPER
728 PAGES
The perennial favorite among students of Spanish, revised with a bonus CD-ROM. Organized alphabetically, each of the often irregular verbs gets its own page -- complete with all the verb tenses, examples and common idioms. The book is both a reference for Spanish speakers and a tool for beginners. Por que no hay como hablar Espanol sin verbos. O algo asi.
(GEN134, $16.99) |
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Amphibians and Reptiles of Northern Guatemala, the Yucatan, and Belize
Jonathan A. Campbell
FIELD GUIDE
1999
PAPER
400 PAGES
This field guide to 160 Central American reptiles and amphibians features 176 color photographs, along with illustrations, maps and detailed descriptions of each species. Author Jonathan Campbell provides his own observations and anecdotes.
(CAM106, $45.00) |
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The Ancient Maya
Loa Traxler
Robert Sharer
ARCHAEOLOGY
2006
PAPER
892 PAGES
In its sixth edition, this scholarly tome is a standard reference on everything Maya, an up-to-date descendent of the original by the pioneering archaeologist Sylvanus Morley. It includes individual site descriptions, maps -- and much else of interest to the general reader. We recommend it for the serious student.
(MYA07, $37.95) |
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Antigua and My Life Before
Marcela Serrano
Margaret Sayers Peden
LITERATURE
2000
PAPER
368 PAGES
Set in Santiago, Chile, and the Guatemalan city of Antigua, this is the story of two women --- one a famous singer, the other an artist/architect -- and a tragic shooting that sparks off memories of their friendship.
(CRB121, $14.00) |
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An Archaeological Guide to Northern Central America
Joyce Kelly
ARCHAEOLOGY
1996
PAPER
352 PAGES
The clear descriptions, site plans, maps and photographs of 38 archeological sites and 25 museums throughout Central America make this book an ideal travel companion. While the book includes general information and road directions, its real value is the detailed site information, background on ancient history and recent archeological activity.
(MYA04, $19.95) |
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The Art of Mesoamerica, from Olmec to Aztec
Mary Ellen Miller
ART & ARCHITECTURE
2006
PAPER
256 PAGES
Miller, a professor at Yale, introduces the range of art produced in Central America and Mexico from 1500 BC to the Spanish conquest in this excellent survey in the popular World of Art series. It's an excellent survey of hundreds of objects and sites of the pre-Columbian world, compact and profusely illustrated. With drawings, black-and-white photographs and site plans. Fourth edition.
(MYA09, $21.95) |
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Belize and Northern Guatemala, Travellers' Wildlife Guides
Les Beletsky
FIELD GUIDE
2010
PAPER
492 PAGES
An all-around field guide intended for the curious traveler, this book features color illustrations of 200 commonly encountered birds, 50 mammals, 150 coral reef creatures and 80 species of reptiles and amphibians. It also includes a good introduction to Belize, its natural history and conservation.
(BLZ04, $29.95) |
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The Birds of Tikal, An Annotated Checklist
Randall Beavers
FIELD GUIDE
1992
PAPER
153 PAGES
The serious birder will find this annotated list of birds found at Tikal a useful adjunct to a field guide. With a 40-page introduction to the region, a few black-and-white photographs, checklist and notes.
(GML08, $29.50) |
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Birds of Tropical America
Steven Hilty
NATURAL HISTORY
2005
PAPER
312 PAGES
An ornithologist and veteran leader of birding expeditions, Hilty serves up short essays on how to find and better appreciate the dizzying variety of neotropical birds, their habits and habitats, diversity and distribution in this favorite book. This is not a field guide, but rather a natural history and an introduction to antbirds, flycatchers, manikins and other typical bird families. With 11 lovely pencil illustrations by Mimi Hoppe Wolfe. Originally published in 1994, this new edition is updated with new references.
(CAM39, $25.00) |
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The Blood of Kings, Dynasty and Ritual in Maya Art
Linda Schele
Mary Ellen Miller
ARCHAEOLOGY
1990
PAPER
542 PAGES
Turn to this book if you're intrigued by Maya glyphs. Massive in size and importance, Blood of the Kings is a definitive re-evaluation of Maya culture based on recently deciphered hieroglyphic inscriptions. Beautifully illustrated, we first turned to this brilliant book after an inspiring lecture by Schele on Palenque's Pascal the Great. It's a demanding but masterful exegesis of our new understanding of Maya written language -- and how it has radically transformed our notions of the culture.
(MYA08, $39.95) |
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Breaking the Maya Code
Michael Coe
ARCHAEOLOGY
1999
PAPER
304 PAGES
A broadly considered history. Michael Coe chronicles the centuries-long search for the "rosetta stone" of the Mayan language, a search which received an enormous boost in 1952 when Yuri Knorosov successfully translated the Dresden Codex, a Mayan bark-paper text. The book also includes an extensive discussion of Maya studies and political activism in the wake of Knorosov's discovery.
(MYA30, $19.95) |
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A Brief History of Central America
Hector Perez-Brignoll
HISTORY
1989
PAPER
223 PAGES
A good overview of the region's economic, political and social history through the 1980s by a professor at the University of Costa Rica. Well-written, informative and concise, it's especially good on the geography of the region and colonial history.
(CAM49, $25.95) |
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The Buried Mirror
Carlos Fuentes
CULTURAL PORTRAIT
1999
PAPER
399 PAGES
A fascinating, illustrated survey of Latin American culture and history by the great Mexican author Carlos Fuentes. With hundreds of color illustrations. Fuentes hosted a television series by the same name.
(SPN71, $29.95) |
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Central America Map
ITMB
2008
MAP
Produced for the traveler, this detailed, double-sided map gives an overview of the whole Central American isthmus at a scale of 1:1,100,000. Two Sides. 26x40 inches.
(CAM20, $12.95) |
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Central America, A Nation Divided
Ralph Lee Woodward
HISTORY
1999
PAPER
448 PAGES
A balanced standard history of the region -- popular as a university textbook and thoroughly revised to reflect the momentous events in the region since 1976. With an extensive guide to further reading.
(CAM80, $39.95) |
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Chronicle of the Maya Kings and Queens, Deciphering the Dynasties of the Ancient Maya
Simon Martin
Nikolai Grube
ARCHAEOLOGY
2008
PAPER
240 PAGES
The history of the Maya dynasties, encompassing biographies of 152 kings and queens, as gleaned from recently deciphered hieroglyphs. It's an unusual, rewarding book, illustrated in color and black-and-white.
(MYA31, $26.95) |
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The Code of Kings, The Language of Seven Sacred Maya Temples and Tombs
Linda Schele
Peter Mathews
ARCHAEOLOGY
1999
PAPER
432 PAGES
A vivid guided survey of seven Maya sites, including Palenque, Tikal and Chichen Itza. This outstanding book features photos and line drawings throughout, and introductory chapters with a succinct introduction to Maya history and culture. Mayanists Schele and Mathews draw on recently found hieroglyphic writing to reveal the life -- and individual personalities -- of the ancient cities. Although it's not a beautiful book, marred by small print and lack of color, this book is still an essential companion to visiting Tikal, Palenque, Copan, Seibal, Chich'en Itza, Uxmal or Iximche'.
(MYA13, $22.00) |
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Coffee and Power, Revolution and the Rise of Democracy in Central America
Jeffery M. Paige
HISTORY
1998
PAPER
448 PAGES
Panoramic in scope, this scholarly history examines the emerging democracies of Central America and especially the political impact on powerful families who control coffee production. The author combines exhaustive historical research, covering the last 30 years, with wide-ranging interviews.
(CAM50, $30.00) |
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Collapse, How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
Jared Diamond
HISTORY
2011
PAPER
575 PAGES
Big, wildly ambitious, provocative, this is Jared Diamond at his best. He tackles nothing less than the history and fate of civilization in this compelling book in which he offers case studies, present and past, of societies that work and societies that do not. He devotes 100 carefully reasoned pages, for example, to the fate of the Norse settlements in Greenland (climatic change, Inuit) and another big section on Easter Island (deforestation, hubris). It's a fitting follow-up to his Pulitzer-Prize winning Guns, Germs and Steel.
(GEN324, $18.00) |
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The Control of Nature
John McPhee
NATURAL HISTORY
1989
PAPER
272 PAGES
A bestseller in the classic McPhee tradition, this book explores our generally feeble attempts to combat all-powerful nature. Interweaving solid science, interviews and observation, he chronicles the army corps of engineers and their efforts to control the Mississippi, Icelanders and their attempts to control the flow of a volcano, and Angelinos and how they cope with the ever-present threat of seismic destruction. A national treasure, no one explains geology and geologists like McPhee. Like most of his work, these vintage essays originally appeared in the "New Yorker."
(NAT01, $16.00) |
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Coral Reef Fishes
Ewald Lieske
Robert Myers
FIELD GUIDE
2002
PAPER
400 PAGES
A convenient handbook to shallow-water fishes associated with coral reefs throughout the Indo-Pacific and Caribbean, compact and comprehensive. With 2,500 illustrations covering 2,100 species worldwide.
(DIV05, $24.95) |
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Costa Rican Natural History
Daniel Janzen
NATURAL HISTORY
1983
PAPER
832 PAGES
A thorough, prize-winning source reader on all aspects of the natural history of Costa Rica as edited by the iconoclast ecologist Daniel Janzen. This hefty book contains review articles by 174 contributors on birds, mammals, insects, reptiles, geology, climate, ecology and vegetation. It's illustrated, remarkably well written -- and rewarding for the serious general reader. While its audience is tropical ecologists working in Costa Rica, many of the plants and animals described exist throughout Central America. The format of the book invites selective reading on areas of particular interest. The species-by-species accounts are especially recommended.
(CAM05, $57.50) |
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The Ecology of a Tropical Forest, Seasonal Rhythms and Long-term Changes
Egbert G. Leigh, Jr
NATURAL HISTORY
1996
PAPER
503 PAGES
A summary of research at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute on Barro Colorado Island (which is right in the middle of the Panama Canal). This book, first published in 1982 and revised with a new forward in 1996, is a good overview of the flora, fauna and ecology of the region.
(CAM52, $35.00) |
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A Field Guide to the Amphibians and Reptiles of the Maya World
Julian C. Lee
FIELD GUIDE
2000
PAPER
416 PAGES
A field guide to the lizards, snakes, crocodiles, turtles, toads, frogs, salamanders and other amphibians and reptiles of the Yucatan, Belize and Northern Guatemala. With 350 photographs and drawings, detailed descriptions and glossary of herpetological terms, it's a comprehensive guide.
(CAM104, $36.95) |
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A Field Guide to the Mammals of Central America & Southeast Mexico
Fiona Reid
FIELD GUIDE
2009
PAPER
384 PAGES
A handsomely illustrated field guide to the mammals of the region from Tehuantepec to Panama. The author/illustrator, who lived and worked in Central America, painted most of the animals in the field -- a formidable challenge and -- given the quality of the large color plates -- well worth her while. With a dedication to one of our favorite wildlife artists, Guy Tudor, we knew this book had to be good. If you don't mind the heft, the focused geographic range and large color plates make this book the best resource for visitors to Central America with an interest in mammals.
(CAM60, $59.95) |
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Fishwatcher's Field Guide Caribbean
Idaz Greenberg
FIELD GUIDE
PLASTIC CARD
This double-sided plastic card shows 75 of the most commonly encountered reef fish of the Caribbean in full-color illustrations, convenient for the boat or beach. It's even got a hole punched in it to hang around your neck while snorkeling.
(DIV11, $7.50) |
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Flowering Plants of the Neotropics
Nathan Smith
Scott Mori
Andrew Henderson
Dennis Stevenson
Scott Heald
FIELD GUIDE
2004
HARD COVER
616 PAGES
This beautifully illustrated, authoritative guide, with contributions by dozens of botanists, features 64 color plates and 250 detailed pen-and-ink drawings by Bobbi Angell. It's an excellent, oversize introduction to the showiest, most important and interesting flowering plants of Mexico, Central and South America edited by a team at the New York Botanical Garden. The cover is adorned with a magnificent passiflora.
(CAM103, $99.95) |
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Footprint Belize, Guatemala, & Southern Mexico
Peter Hutchinson
Claire Boobbyer
GUIDEBOOK
2008
PAPER
401 PAGES
A comprehensive practical guide to the Maya World in the estimable British series, strong on the nitty-gritty of travel and with a good overview of history and culture. It covers Guatemala, adjoining Belize and the whole of Southern Mexico, including Chiapas, Oaxaca and the Pacific Coast, and the Yucatan. With maps and a Spanish glossary for the traveler.
(GML11, $23.95) |
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Footprint Mexico & Central America Handbook
Sarah Cameron
Ben Box
GUIDEBOOK
2009
PAPER
1520 PAGES
The classic, comprehensive guide to the region, over 1,200 pages of densely printed information on excursions, food and accommodation throughout the region. Updated annually. An excellent planning guide, it includes maps and an overview of each country.
(MEX64, $27.95) |
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A Forest of Kings, The Untold Story of the Ancient Maya
Linda Schele
David Freidel
HISTORY
1992
PAPER
542 PAGES
Renowned Maya archaeologists Linda Schele and David Freidel tell the history of the Maya, as it was recorded in the previously undecipherable hieroglyphs of the Maya. This excellent account traces the kingships and politics of the Maya, and features narratives recreating scenes of burials, blood sacrifices, battles and other events. The major Maya sites are described in detail, including Palenque, Copan, Yaxchilan, Tikal, Piedras Negras, Uaxactun and Chichen Itza. Accessible to the general reader, this book is profusely illustrated with photographs, color plates, maps and line drawings. Linda Schele is also the author of "The Blood of Kings" (MYA08) and "The Code of Kings" (MYA13). Includes extensive notes, and a glossary of gods and icons.
(MYA22, $24.99) |
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Genesis (Memory of Fire Trilogy, Part 1)
Cedric Belfrage
Eduardo Galeano
HISTORY
1998
PAPER
306 PAGES
Part one of a three-volume history of the Americas composed entirely of short vignettes, this volume extends from the pre-columbian creation myths through the chronicles of conquest and early colonial period. Lyrical, emminently readable and easy to skim for the geographic areas of particular interest.
(MYA18, $16.95) |
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The Green Pharmacy
James A. Duke
NATURAL HISTORY
1999
PAPER
507 PAGES
An A to Z catalog of ailments and the herbal remedies that heal them. Full of facts on the ecology and traditional uses of medicinal plants by a leading ethnobotanist who has conducted much of his research in the Upper Amazon of Peru. Each chapter begins with an anecdote of an encounter with a patient and leads to easy "how-to" instructions for treating the health condition. The chapters cover minor and serious complaints, ranging from bad breath to depression, high cholesterol to wrinkles, morning sickness to viral infections.
(AMZ40, $21.95) |
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Guatemala: Never Again!
Thomas Quigley
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR
1999
PAPER
424 PAGES
An abstract of eyewitness testimony presented in Guatemala in 1998, a heartwrenching report of atrocities committed by the military government the devastating civil war. Published by the Mary Knoll sisters with the Archdiocese of Guatemala.
(CAM88, $34.00) |
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A Guide to Ancient Maya Ruins
C. Bruce Hunter
GUIDEBOOK
1986
PAPER
342 PAGES
A well organized guide to archaeological sites throughout the Maya world with good site diagrams and black-and-white photographs, originally published in 1974 and revised in 1986 for this second edition. While not up-to-date on recent developments, this book is nonetheless a compact, accessible survey of important archaeological sites for the traveler by an experienced study trip leader.
(MYA23, $21.95) |
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A Guide to the Birds of Mexico and Northern Central America
Stephen Howell
Sophie Webb
FIELD GUIDE
1995
PAPER
849 PAGES
Serious birders will want this definitive guide to the 1,070 bird species found in Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras and western Nicaragua. It may be awkward to carry but it covers, in detail, all the birds you will see in the region in a single volume.
(FG15, $49.95) |
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A Guide to the Birds of Panama with Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras
Robert Ridgely
J.A. Gwynne
FIELD GUIDE
1992
PAPER
534 PAGES
A comprehensive field guide, recently updated and masterfully researched. This sturdy edition covers additional species occurring in Nicaragua, Honduras, and Costa Rica -- and a handy checklist by country. We like the descriptions and color plates better than "Birds of Costa Rica" (which is also very good).
(CAM07, $55.00) |
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Honduras Map
ITMB
2011
MAP
A travel map of Honduras at a scale of 1:750,000 with good topographic relief. One Side. 23x39 inches.
(CAM23, $12.95) |
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Honey Jar
Domi
Rigoberta Menchu
LITERATURE
2006
HARD COVER
56 PAGES
YOUNG READERS (Age 4-8)
Nobel Prize-winner and social activist Menchu retells 12 ancient Mayan stories she heard as a child, accompanied by Mexican artist Domi's stylized paintings.
(MYA47, $18.95) |
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The Long Night of White Chickens
Francisco Goldman
LITERATURE
1998
PAPER
472 PAGES
By turns a love story, murder mystery and political fiction, this vivid novel follows the narrator from Boston to Guatemala to New York as he searches for his roots. With a conversational but stunningly evocative and sensual prose, Goldman is just as comfortable discoursing on high school romance as he is with the tortured political history of Central America. His greatest trick, though, is making the reader as empathetic and moved by the complexly portrayed characters as he is. One of the finest young writers working today.
(CAM90, $14.00) |
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The Massacre at El Mozote: A Parable of the Cold War
Mark Danner
HISTORY
1994
PAPER
A brilliant piece of investigative journalism, this book reconstructs the 1981 massacre of 800 men, women and children in a remote Salvadoran village by an elite American trained army battalion. It shows how the Reagan administration made the problem go away -- and how the press was complicit in the cover-up. In the end one is left with what the historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. called "A powerful indictment of our national capacity to betray our own noblest ideals when we claim the right to decide the destiny of other countries." The "New Yorker" magazine devoted an entire issue to it.
(CAM67, $15.95) |
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Maya Cosmos, Three Thousand Years on the Shaman's Path
Joy Parker
Linda Schele
David Freidel
ARCHAEOLOGY
2001
PAPER
543 PAGES
A provocative, speculative history of Central American religious practices since the dawn of the Maya kingdoms. The authors -- an archaeologist, an epigrapher and a popular historian -- suggest that contemporary shamanistic practices may be continuous with the religious rituals of the ancient Maya.
(MYA32, $23.99) |
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Maya Glyphs
S.D. Houston
HISTORY
1989
PAPER
64 PAGES
A concise survey of ancient Maya language and writing for the interested traveler. It includes an excellent chapter which introduces Maudslay, Morley, Thompson, Proskouriakoff and other key figures in Maya archaeology. While linguists will better appreciate the chapters on the spelling, structure and grammar of Maya writing, serious study of this book will help anyone better appreciate the Maya world.
(MYA24, $15.95) |
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The Maya Tropical Forest: Peoples, Parks and Ancient Cities
James D. Nations
HISTORY
2006
PAPER
323 PAGES
Jim Nations draws on field work in the region over the last 25 years in this personable, detailed overview of the people, history and wildlife of the lowland tropical forest of southern Mexico, Guatemala and Belize. With chapters on the Selva Lacandona (Chiapas), Calakmul (Chetumal), the Maya Biosphere reserve in Guatemala (including Tikal) and protected sites in Belize.
(MYA49, $22.95) |
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Moon Handbook Honduras
Chris Humphrey
GUIDEBOOK
2009
PAPER
500 PAGES
A great resource for the independent traveler, this guidebook features a good introduction to the land, history and culture of Honduras, as well as practical detail on getting around, where to go, and where to stay. With 35 detailed maps, a Spanish glossary to Honduran slang, and articles on the Copan ruins, the Bay Islands and the Rio Plantano Biosphere Reserve.
(CAM73, $19.95) |
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The Mosquito Coast
Paul Theroux
LITERATURE
2006
PAPER
384 PAGES
A taught psychological tale of a man who abandons civilization for the wilds of Honduras (much better than the movie!). Allie Fox defeats the mosquitoes, tames the river and swamp, and sets out to build an iceberg -- mostly as a monument to himself.
(CAM34, $14.95) |
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A Naturalist's Guide to the Tropics
Marco Lambertini
John Venerella
NATURAL HISTORY
2000
PAPER
338 PAGES
A compact guide to the world's tropical zone, organized by biome. It's a good overview of the ecology of forests, mangroves, coral reefs, deserts, and grasslands found between the Tropic of Capricorn and the Tropic of Cancer. A useful companion for travelers to tropical latitudes. With color photographs and color plates illustrating a sampling of the most conspicuous birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians, and fish.
(CON17, $30.00) |
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Neotropical Rainforest Mammals, A Field Guide
L.H. Emmons
FIELD GUIDE
1997
PAPER
298 PAGES
An illustrated guide to the mammals of the New World tropics, compact enough to slip into your daypack, with 29 color plates illustrating more than 200 species. It covers most Central and South American mammals. Even the author concedes that it's difficult to see many of the more elusive rain forest mammals but keep a close watch for the sloths -- they're marvelous, and not likely to escape in a hurry.
(GPS12, $42.50) |
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Nothing to Declare
Mary Morris
TRAVEL NARRATIVE
1999
PAPER
250 PAGES
FAVORITE
COMING IN
An absorbing memoir of a woman traveling alone through Mexico and Central America. Morris, a favorite writer, evokes the people and places she visits on her travels in gritty immediate detail. Her travels include San Miguel de Allende, the Guatemalan Highlands, Bay Islands, and Nicaragua.
(CAM08, $15.00) |
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Pimsleur Quick & Simple Spanish
Pimsleur Language Method
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS
2005
AUDIO CD
Four audio CDs with eight 30-minute lessons in basic Spanish, covering elementary vocabulary and phrases used in travel and everyday situations. The Pimsleur method emphasizes the use of listening skills without reading materials (so there isn't a book to follow along). It's advertised as "Totally audio: hear it, learn it, speak it."
(SPN257, $19.95) |
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Reef Fish Identification Caribbean
Paul Humann
FIELD GUIDE
2002
FLEXI-BOUND
400 PAGES
The serious underwater enthusiast will enjoy Paul Humann's Reef Fish Identification, a 400-page essential reference with 670 color photographs. It includes all the fishes associated with Atlantic Ocean reefs along with those of neighboring marine habitats and several first-ever photographs of elusive species.
(DIV03, $39.95) |
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The Rigoberta Menchu Controversy
arturo arias
HISTORY
2001
PAPER
416 PAGES
A collection of scholarly essays and primary source documents which illumine the debate about the authenticity of Rigoberta Menchu's Nobel Prize-winning autobiography.
(GML10, $23.50) |
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Rough Guide Central America
Peter Eltringham
GUIDEBOOK
2011
PAPER
896 PAGES
A no-nonsense, comprehensive travel guide to Central America with country-by-country descriptions and a solid overview of history, culture and nature. It covers Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama.
(CAM95, $26.99) |
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Rough Guide Guatemala
Rough Guide
GUIDEBOOK
2009
PAPER
511 PAGES
A comprehensive guide, our favorite for Guatemala, with good cultural information and the best overview of where to go and what to do throughout the country. It's got consistently more -- and more accurate -- information on markets, towns and excursions than the competition. The contexts section at the back of the book, with historical and cultural information, is equally as strong. With sections on Copan and the Honduran Bay Islands.
(CAM89, $21.99) |
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Scribes, Warriors and Kings: The City of Copan and the Ancient Maya
William L Fash
ARCHAEOLOGY
2001
PAPER
192 PAGES
A revised edition of the comprehensive, illustrated overview of the great city of Copan, its rise to power, history and mysterious collapse in the ninth century. Fash pays particular attention to the role of recently deciphered inscriptions in our changing understanding of the Maya.
(MYA11, $24.95) |
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Snakes, The Evolution of Mystery in Nature
Harry W. Greene
NATURAL HISTORY
1997
HARD COVER
288 PAGES
Published to wildly enthusiastic reviews in 1997, this illustrated volume documents the ecology and diversity of snakes worldwide. Anecdotal, informative and entertaining, snakes couldn't have asked for a better advocate than herpetologist Harry Greene -- and the photographs are stunning.
(BST33, $60.00) |
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Snorkeling Guide to Marine Life
Paul Humann
FIELD GUIDE
1995
PAPER
80 PAGES
A compact guide illustrating all the fishes, corals, invertebrates and plants you are most likely to encounter in less than 15 feet of water in the Caribbean. Humann's photographs are among the best we've seen for identification -- and its handy size makes it perfect to take along in the boat or to the beach.
(DIV02, $14.95) |
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Spirits of the Jaguar
BBC
NATURAL HISTORY
2006
DVD
Billed as "The Definitive Portrait of the Land, Wildlife and Peoples of Central America, this four-part BBC television series is an excellent introduction to the region. It includes the programs: The Forging of a New World, Forest of the Maya, Hunters of the Caribbean Sea and The Fifth World of Aztecs.
(CAM59, $19.98) |
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Travelers' Tales Central America
Larry Habegger
Natanya Pearlman
ANTHOLOGY
2001
PAPER
277 PAGES
A well-edited collection of eyewitness reports by journalists, travelers and writers including Joan Didion, P.J. O'Rourke and Paul Theroux. Organized thematically with contributions set in Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.
(CAM96, $17.95) |
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The True History of Chocolate
Sophie D. Coe
Michael Coe
FOOD
2007
PAPER
288 PAGES
A scholarly history of the fact and meaning of pre-Columbian chocolate by the husband and wife archaeologists Michael and Sophia Coe. Originating as a ceremonial beverage in ancient Olmec and Maya society, chocolate evolved from a food of the gods to the salons of Europe down through the masses to Hershey Pennsylvania. With illustrations and recipes.
(CAM57, $21.95) |
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Ultimate Spanish, Basic-Intermediate with Book
Irwin Stern
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS
2000
CASETTE TAPE
A university-level Spanish course in a box, this set includes 40 short lessons on eight, 60-minute CDs and a 400-page accompanying text. The focus is on dialogues and conversation with attention paid to vocabulary and grammar. Most of the course features Latin American speakers with some Castillian variations in the lessons on Spain. With sections on business, etiquette and culture. Published by Living Language.
(SPN175, $75.00) |
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Unfinished Conquest, The Guatemalan Tragedy
Daniel Chauche
Victor Perera
HISTORY
1993
PAPER
297 PAGES
An oral history of devastating 30-year civil war. Perera interviewed hundreds of people for this astonishing book, not only the resilient Maya but also landowners, government officials, military personnel, and clergy. With photographs by Daniel Chauche. Perera, a Guatemalan-born academic, has also written a compelling memoir, "Rites: A Guatemalan Boyhood."
(CAM83, $31.95) |
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The University of Chicago Dictionary, Spanish-English/English-Spanish
Carlos Castillo
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS
2002
PAPER
603 PAGES
Long a favorite with students and travelers, this new edition -- the first in 15 years -- of the University of Chicago dictionary brings vocabulary and usage up to date. With slang, vulgar and otherwise, a concise dictionary of words, phrases, and basic grammar.
(SPN118, $11.00) |
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Yucatan Map
ITMB
2008
MAP
Double-sided, indexed road map of the region at 1:500,000, printed on durable waterproof paper. Coverage divides the area into north and south sections, and includes all of Belize. Latitude and longitude lines are drawn at 30' intervals. Map legend is in English and Spanish. Two Sides. 27 X 37 inches.
(MEX04, $12.95) |
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