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Many Mexicos

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Perhaps no country's history is as fascinating and perplexing as that of Mexico. "Mother Mexico," land of paradox, of contradiction and extreme--these are the strands that Lesley Byrd Simpson weaves into a unified fabric in presenting the country's history. First published in 1941, Many Mexicos was awarded the Commonwealth Club Gold Medal for Literature. Travelers, students, and all who delight in the adventure of narrative history have since treasured the volume for its clarity and readability. Now, completely revised, the Silver Anniversary Edition reflects the vast published output of these past twenty-five years on the history of Mexico. Some chapters have been enlarged, others corrected. A map of Mexico showing political subdivisions is now included, and, in general, new material has been added to document the author's controversial statement (and there are many). Bloody conquests and revolutions; men, good or evil; art, religion, and institutions brought from Spain or made in Mexico; topography and climate; the conflict of cultures and races; and finally, the emergence of Mexico into today's bewildering world--this in broad outline is the absorbing story Mr. Simpson so warmly presents.

407 pages, Paperback

First published May 2, 1960

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Lesley Byrd Simpson

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for David Groves.
Author 2 books6 followers
September 7, 2016
This is the best book I have read in ten years. Upon finishing it, I wanted to go right back and read it again, just to burn it into my memory.

Not only is this book informative about all the right things, but it also has a great wit and knowing attitude. You get a sense that you are being told a story by a great old lady who knows everything, including every leader's motives and interests. Often, I read histories that are simply a summing up of leaders and wars, with no muscles and ligaments to connect them. This is the rare exception. It gives an entire world-view at the same time that it informs you which damn thing led to the next damn thing.

Nineteenth-century Mexican history is depressing, to be sure, but this story is structured so that you understand what lay behind everything. Santa Anna's life story, which could better be described as supreme narcissism, is summarized in one chapter, which is excellent, because he was a cat with eleven lives--that is, eleven separate reigns as president. In covering Santa Anna thus, Simpson covers not just one leader, but an entire era, including the various other leaders who led the country in between times.

Yes, Simpson views Mexico through a liberal US prism, but that prism reflects my sympathies. I don't care that the Catholic Church disapproves of free speech, secular education, and freedom in general. I don't care that Mexican nationalists may long for the days of the old haciendas, when labor fell in line and suffered at their whim, or Mexican conservatives who believe that foreign powers had a right to rape the economy and the masses. I consider liberal representative American democracy to be the highest form of government.

What attracted me to this book was the legendary Robert Kirsch's recommendation that it is the best book on Mexican history, and being an author myself, I can attest that Kirsch was right, that this book is superior in style, content, and voice. I would dearly like to meet Lesley Byrd Simpson, this charming and erudite story weaver, but alas, I am decades too late.
Profile Image for Kirstie.
75 reviews1 follower
August 12, 2022
Superb overview of foundational themes in the story of Mexico (only caveat being that author uses the word "primitive" more than zero times). As both a Mexican and American citizen, I consider this book invaluable for understanding the nation that is either home or neighbor to most of North America.
Profile Image for Moira Crone.
35 reviews
August 19, 2010
I read this book because it was a history of Mexico when I was there. It does discuss all the changes in regime up until the 1960's but it is condescending it seems.
Profile Image for Bob.
672 reviews7 followers
August 30, 2016
I enjoyed the first chapters of the book, which traced the progress of Spanish institutions in New Spain with even-handedness and simple exposition. Simpson´s treatment of Mexico following independence seemed superficial and dismissive and, of course, ends in the 1950´s, before the PRI had ceased to be the only political party in national government.
Profile Image for Hilary.
247 reviews2 followers
May 16, 2009
This book is so damn old and boring that I finally ended up using it as insomniac reading to put me to sleep. Don't read it.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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