BanderasNews is proud to present a serialized and updated version of Polly G. Vicars' sell-out book, Tales of Retirement in Paradise. |
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««« Click HERE for Recent Books Travel Classics West Writers Conference PVNN
Registration is now open for the Travel Classics West 2008 Writers Conference at The Boulders Resort and Golden Door Spa in Scottsdale, AZ from October 23-26, 2008. Don't miss what could be the most rewarding experience of your writing career!
Tales of Retirement - Revisited PVNN
If you've ever wondered what it'd be like to live or retire in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, be sure to visit BanderasNews each week for a new chapter of the serialized and updated version of Polly G. Vicars' 1995 sell-out book, Tales of Retirement in Paradise.
Scenes From Mexico City Show Its Human Heart Theresa Bradley
Mexico City is a sprawling, throbbing stew of 20 million people, but David Lida, in his new book, cuts through the chaos with an array of verbal snapshots that aim to paint the city's soul.
National Endowment for the Arts Announces Big Grants for The Big Read National Endowment for the Arts
The National Endowment for the Arts announced that 208 libraries, municipalities, and arts, culture, and science organizations will receive grants totaling $2,810,500 to host Big Read celebrations between September 2008 and June 2009.
Puncturing Immigration Myths George Fulmore
Demographic data tell us that the future of California will be dominated by retiree/seniors and Latinos. For this to work best, the two groups should see how each complements the other. Retiree/seniors need to seek a balance on some immigration myths.
Lessons From the Poor Cal Thomas
A new book, “Lessons from the Poor: Triumph of the Entrepreneurial Spirit,” is an optimistic triumph and a lesson about the unlimited capacity of the human spirit, properly inspired and unencumbered.
U.S. Poets in Mexico Comes To Merida In January 2009 Sheila Lanham
Beginning in January 2009, U.S. Poets in Mexico will host distinguished contemporary American and Mexican poets in the colonial city of Merida each year for one week of poetry workshops, readings and lectures.
How the 'New World' Is In Fact Being 'Ordered' Clarity Press
The trial of Saddam Hussein marks the first time since the UN was created that a head of state has been put on trial by an invading, occupying power. THE TRIAL OF SADDAM HUSSEIN seeks to draw public attention to the threat this precedent poses to developing nations worldwide, and to its distortive influence on the further evolution of international law.
Children's "Hot Picks" for Summer Reading Fun Jennifer Turner
This summer, I have selected a group of books that help readers to travel globally - to experience some of the cultures, customs, and traditions of people from different continents.
Gingrich Quips Bush Should Have Allowed Some 'Reminder' Attacks David Edwards & Muriel Kane
During an appearance at a Long Island bookstore last month, former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich was asked by a member of the audience why the United States has not been hit again since 9/11.
Our Books Shall Speak for Our Culture PVNN
Floricanto Press, Inc., founded in 1982, is a premier publisher of books and digital products for the Hispanic markets in the United States and abroad. Here's a sampling of four of their new releases.
Ex-Press Aide Writes That Bush Misled US on Iraq Michael D. Shear
Former White House press secretary Scott McClellan writes in a new memoir that the Iraq war was sold to the American people with a sophisticated "political propaganda campaign" led by President Bush and aimed at "manipulating sources of public opinion" and "downplaying the major reason for going to war."
Moyers on Democracy CommonDreams.org
"Democracy in America is a series of narrow escapes, and we may be running out of luck." The following is an excerpt from Bill Moyers' new book, "Moyers on Democracy."
The Story of Obama, Written by Obama Janny Scott
Barack Obama was a first-time author and rookie politician embarking upon his first run for public office. Hermene Hartman was the publisher of N’Digo, a magazine in Chicago aimed at upscale black readers. As Ms. Hartman tells it, she got a call from Mr. Obama in the fall of 1995 saying he wanted to come and talk. He wanted her to read his newly published memoir.
Little Pieces of Los Angeles, Done His Way Janet Maslin
He wrote a book but it was bad, liar bad, faker bad, it got him in trouble. A million little pieces. It was the name of the book. It was also how hard he got hit. He had to sit there on the couch. Everybody saw. The television celebrity book club woman got mad, she let him have it. He had to sit there on the couch. He squirmed, he cringed. Everybody watched, everybody blamed him. Then it was over. Then he was gone.
Poet Fined for Insulting Mexican Flag, Calls Ruling Threat to Free Speech Associated Press
Mexican poet Sergio Witz Rodriguez, has been fined about US $5 for desecrating the country's flag by writing a poem in 2000 about using it to wipe up urine and excrement.
The New Frontier Zane Fischer
Historietas - pocket-sized comic books - have been popular and widely available in Mexico for many years, but Arellano’s may be the first hybrid historieta, bridging the US and Mexico on paper in a way that has yet to manifest in real life.
Mexico Votes for Fixed Prices Barbara Casassus
The Mexican Senate or upper house of parliament has voted by a massive majority to introduce fixed book prices. The law was adopted by the Senate on 29th April by 107 votes in favour, two against and five abstentions.
"Puerto Vallarta 2008" Judy Babcock Wylie
This is an unusually good guidebook that goes beyond the usual listings of restaurants and activities to include background on culture, food and the history of the people who live here.
Brenda Martin Called Scapegoat Brookes Merritt
Brenda Martin should never have stayed in Mexico after her boss's empire of fraud started crumbling, says Canadian Roger Harrison who's penned a book about the infamous $60-million TriWest Internet Ponzi scheme.
Noted Mexican Novelist Scoffs at Need for Fences Sandra Dibble
In a talk titled “Globalization: A New Deal for a New Age,” Carlos Fuentes predicted yesterday that “frontiers are going to be erased and new communities are going to rise up” that transcend existing borders.
How Many Earth Days Do We Have Left? Terrence McNally
Of all the resources needed to build an economy that will sustain economic progress, none is more scarce than time. That is one of the key messages of PLAN-B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, the newest book by Lester Brown.
ˇAsk a Mexican! Gustavo Arellano
Dear Readers: The paperback version of my book is out in stores now, cheap enough so that even a Guatemalan can afford it. Buy it, por favor! Now, on to the preguntas...
Writers & Company Continues Its Special on Contemporary Mexican Writers Words At Large
Eleanor Wachtel explores the literary landscape of our other NAFTA partner in the special "Mexico Unmasked." Her conversations with some of that country’s most influential writers counter the stereotypes many continue to hold about the place.
Diego Rivera: The Complete Murals Jane Ure-Smith
The great pleasure of Diego Rivera: the Complete Murals, published last November in Spanish to mark the 50th anniversary of the artist's death - and now, finally, available in English - is that you can pore over every detail of the artist's work, the details you inevitably miss if you see the works in situ.
Mexico Marks Octavio Paz Anniversary Reed Johnson
This week marks the 10th anniversary of the death of Octavio Paz, the Nobel Prize-winning Mexican poet, writer and diplomat.
Hemingway´s Home... in Cuba Brian Hicks
He was an old man who worked alone in a house on a hill outside Havana, and it is here that he wrote the story of a great fish. And today, it is not so different from when he left it.
Jehovah's Witness Has Crisis of Conscience David A. Reed
The author, Raymond Franz, had been under ban by the Watchtower Society since 1981, when he was excommunicated for eating a meal with a previously banned individual, his landlord. Five million Jehovah's Witnesses are now forbidden to speak to Franz, read his book, or even say "Hello" if they pass him on the street.
Intimidating the Press Dan Froomkin
The publication of a new book by Eric Lichtblau is calling attention to how the White House successfully persuaded the Times to suppress its expose of the Bush administration's warrantless surveillance program in the fall of 2004 - when it might have had a profound effect on President Bush's reelection hopes.
Book Review: Behind Colombian Coal Jeffery R. Webber
Two of the editors, Aviva Chomsky and Steve Striffler, are scholar-activists, and Garry Leech is a journalist, author, activist and editor of the on-line publication, Colombia Journal.
Meet Vallarta's Authors at NVBookstore in Nuevo Vallarta PVNN
Five of Vallarta's favorite published authors will get together at the NVBookstore in Paradise Plaza Mall in Nuevo Vallarta for a group book signing symposium on Wednesday, April 9th from 10:30 am until 12 Noon (Jalisco time.)
Try Reading a Book Before You Ban It Bill Maxwell
Here we go again. Parents are upset with language or a specific word in the books their children are reading at school. This time, as in many other instances nationwide, the offender is the N-word.
In Mexico: On the Lam With Ken Kesey Lawrence Downes
I am in the ocean, doing nothing, just bobbing. I said I was doing nothing, but I’m actually trying to summon somebody: Ken Kesey, novelist, psychedelic prophet, leader of the Merry Pranksters, hero of “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.” It was here, on this beach, that he took to the waves as I did, back in 1966.
Book Details U.S. Pressure On Allies Before War Colum Lynch
In the months leading up to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the Bush administration threatened trade reprisals against friendly countries who withheld their support, spied on its allies, and pressed for the recall of U.N. envoys that resisted U.S. pressure to endorse the war, according to an upcoming book by a top Chilean diplomat.
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