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Miraculous Air: Journey of a Thousand Miles through Baja California, the Other Mexico

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This exquisite book is a rare jewel in the literature of Mexico and its little-known peninsula, Baja California. Describing her adventures on this austere and beautiful slip of land, C. M. Mayo creates a multi-layered map of place filled with daredevil aviators, sea turtle researchers, Stone Age cave painters, and countless other colorful characters. Covering Baja from Cabo San Lucas to Tijuana, Mayo's wit and curiosity help her weave a story that seamlessly combines history, myth, art, and local color. "With elegant prose and an artist's eye for detail, Mayo may just have written one of the best books ever about Baja California. Highly recommended" Library Journal "Ay, if only I had been at C.M. Mayo's side in her rendezvous through Baja California... My recourse is her joyful, intellectually sparkling chronicle" Ilan Staváns, author of The Hispanic Condition "Perhaps the best new book about Mexico (and — indirectly — its northern neighbor) in many years.... This book has our highest recommendation. It is a joy." Interamerican Studies Institute "A breathtaking vision of the past, present, and future of [Baja California]... Meticulously researched... a valuable combination of historical and social study" El Paso Times "A luminous exploration of Baja California, from its southern tip at Cabo San Lucas to its 'lost city' of Tijuana... [Mayo] takes the fiction writer's impulse and blends it with the instincts of a journalist to create a work of nonfiction that elides into modern myth" Los Angeles Times Book Review "This is the one book that truly deserves the "highly recommended" label for us Mexicophiles." The Mexico File "Miraculous Air is rich with its own evocative descriptions of the peninsula's raw beauty.. Her journey of 1,000 miles is a trip worth taking." The San Diego Union-Tribune "A beguiling picture of an exasperating place 'where nothing is as it seems,' a place both 'touched with evil' and blessed with beauty and hope... a stunning portrait of Baja California" Sara Mansfield Taber, author of Dusk on the Campo "C.M. Mayo uses a reporter's instincts, an artist's eye, and a deft literary touch to create visions of Baja California to delight those who know it best and offers a knowing introduction to others who resort to the pleasures of these pages. A sensitive and knowing over-view of a place and a people so near and yet so far from the U.S. or Mexico." Harry W. Crosby, author of Antigua California C.M. Mayo is the author of Sky Over El Nido, winner of the Flannery O'Connor Award, Metaphysical Odyssey into the Mexican Revolution, winner of the National Indie Excellence Award for History, and the novel The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire, selected a best book of 2009 by Library Journal. An avid translator, she is editor of the collection of 24 Mexican writers, many in translation for the first time, A Traveler's Literary Companion. Visit her website at www.cmmayo.com

479 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2002

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About the author

C.M. Mayo

16 books23 followers
C.M. Mayo is the author of The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire , as well as the widely-lauded travel memoir, Miraculous Air: Journey of a Thousand Miles through Baja California, the Other Mexico , and Sky Over El Nido , which won the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction. She is also the editor of Mexico: A Traveler's Literary Companion , which was published by Whereabouts Press in March 2006.

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Nola.
254 reviews1 follower
February 12, 2020
Even after I’ve read it, I’m not quite sure what this book is about. It details the southern part of Baja California. Since this is the area we are going to be visiting (and have visited), it interests me. Why did the author write about the particular places she did, and not places in the northern part of the peninsula? I don’t know, and for me, it doesn’t really matter. Why did she write about Baja at all? Again, I’m not sure. There were allusions to the reason in the book, but I didn’t really grasp the reason. However, I learned about the history of the area since the Spanish conquest in vivid detail and I learned about several hidden areas that I wouldn’t have known of otherwise.
I didn’t know where this book was going when I started it. It began with a couple of hooks, which never ac6tually went anywhere, but it still looked like it could be boring, but I soon found out that it wasn’t. I had to read through the first pages not knowing if it would be worth continuing. It was. The descriptions of the tourists in Baja and the author’s meetings with her sources can drag. On the other hand, they do convey flavor. Maybe I just don’t always like the flavor, but it does make what you read more real. By the time I was reading about János Xantus camping on the beach for two years in what is now Cabo San Lucas to survey wildlife, I was hooked. Then the history and visual descriptions of various places made the book worthwhile for me.
At the end, I feel like I’ve read a mystery novel or autobiography where the answer is never revealed. I never understood the reasons the author wanted to explore Baja and wanted to write this book. There are strong hints about those reasons, but either I was too dense to understand or they were never brought out in the book. But that’s fine. It’s a well-written book with worthwhile information, and the mystery of it alludes to the contrast of Baja with both the United States and with Mexico City.
Profile Image for Leo Buijs.
Author 11 books5 followers
February 6, 2017
A lovely book about Baja California. I have been going there for the last 15 years and should have read this book earlier. However, most places and experiences such as whale watching, hiking to the fascinating cave paintings and much more, I have done over the years. So it was a very pleasant read to bring back my own experiences and I learned a lot more as the author laces her stories with many excellent interviews of local people. The end is a bit of a bummer as she has trouble finding an end to her story. Not a very nice description of life in Mexico city, which had no place in this book about Miraculous Air in California
Profile Image for B.
2,348 reviews
February 15, 2018
A great example of what a travelogue should look like with historical information mixed in with portraits of the people that live there, all told in a conversational style that sometimes shocks with ugly truths but often amuses as well. This book is one of many on a reading list for an upcoming trip and it's good I chose to read it early as it has given me a great understanding of this isolated beautiful area of Mexico.
Profile Image for Julie.
426 reviews4 followers
February 21, 2018
I was curious to read a travel book about the Baja, that is, Baja California. Written in the 90's, the author's travels took place 20 years after I spent time there. A bit disjointed at first, but after I got the hang of her style, I thoroughly enjoyed the ride. She includes lots of history of Mexico, it's politics and interesting characters she met along the way.
Profile Image for Noel.
499 reviews1 follower
August 28, 2020
Really enjoyed learning more about Baja and its history.
61 reviews1 follower
January 14, 2019
If you want to know the Baja read this.

This is the truth of the Baja.
For over 30 years I have lived in California and Cabo.
I bought a condo in Marina Sol before the 7 story was started.
I truly love the Baja, and it's people. I have gone to all these places . I have never felt danger.
However now from TJ to just north of Cabo the behaviour
of Mexico City now pervades.
No longer can you drive down with out worries and I would NOT advise it
As far as Cabo is concerned it's safe.
Just north of San Jose del Cabo the Mexican government
Has built a huge military base to protect the jewel at the tip of Baja and all the American investments.
Out side of the growth in Cabo San Lucas,
It is truly the "found" jewel of Mexico.
Profile Image for Mikel Miller.
Author 15 books16 followers
April 5, 2015
From my Amazon review: What sets this masterpiece apart from other books about the Baja peninsula is the author's insights and dedication to detail in telling stories. This is literature and history, full of insights that most Baja books ignore when writing about people and places. A good example is the chapter about Bahia de Los Angeles, an out-of-the-way paradise on the Sea of Cortez forty miles from Highway 1. Jacques Cousteau proclaimed it a natural aquarium, John Steinbeck marveled at the marine life, and dozens of other authors have described it over the years. I've been there too, and have written about it. Mayo goes beyond description to provide insights from the panga fisherman who gives a guided tour of the bay to Mayo and her sister. Great reading; a book I loaded into my iPad to make sure I can refer to it whenever I want to learn more about the peninsula.
Profile Image for Becky Johnson.
101 reviews4 followers
July 1, 2012
I appreciated the book for its focus on Baja California — a region of Mexico you don’t hear much about besides Tijuana and Cabo San Lucas. Mayo tends to visit more off-the-beaten path type places and give interesting and in depth character sketches — of an artists’ colony in Todos Santos, of the owners of the quaint inns where she stays, of fishermen. Led by a local guide, she and her sister hike to several remote rock art locations not frequented by tourists, and Mayo goes on a week-long whale watching excursion, admittedly more to observe the other tourists.

Read the rest of my review here: http://beckyajohnson.net/2012/04/21/m...
Profile Image for Carol.
163 reviews9 followers
July 21, 2017
An accounting of a 1,000-mile walk through Baja California, Mexico. Reads rather like a journal, which is a writing style I don't enjoy. Nevertheless, lots of information and accounting of experiences, communities and people encountered on the journey, descriptions of raw beauty.
Profile Image for Kate.
Author 7 books259 followers
March 16, 2014
Has some excellent moments and some moments that drag. A reminder that a good editor can make a book shine!
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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