3.5 stars.
I have read several books about Mexico. This one is short (200 pages) and satisfactory, but it is a little dated, published in the early years of Vicente Fox (nearly a quarter of a century ago). It is appropriate for a long travel day, a worthwhile read if you know little to nothing about Mexico.
This book does a fine job of describing the political vacillations of New Spain and the early republic. I liked the author's observation that Mexican independence was, in a sense, a conservative revolution, in the same way American independence was (oriented around the ascendancy of the local elite more than any meaningful reordering of society) and how the progression of both countries is rooted in an unfulfilled political promise. I also liked his nuanced assessment of the Reforma: the liberals sold the confiscated church lands to American speculators because the local Catholic nobility did not gravitate to such transactions, and this changed society in a number of ways. (The author implies the Catholic Church was a better feudal overlord to Mexico's poor and indigenous communities than the foreign capitalists were, but I think he could have explored this topic in more depth than he did.)
The book is less interesting after Cardenas, reading like a king's list of mediocre Mexican politicians. (The author is kind to Salinas, and I wonder if historians will take his side in the long run. For now, I think there is ample evidence that he and his family were crooks.) I would have liked a better balance of social and political history, to better understand the student uprisings in the 60s, but also violence in Chiapas (to say nothing of the drug cartels).
Note: I did not read the second-to-last chapter, about Mexican-Americans living in the United States, mostly because I was more interested in Mexico.