Picked this up at the 2025 LA Times FOB after seeing Blanco discussing this book on a panel (it was an excellent panel, my favorite of 2025).
This is a look at a Rarámuri family--one of many forced out of the mountains by drought and cartel farmers. They have moved into Chihuahua city, where they try to hold onto their traditions while also being forced into the cash economy. Blanco covers the good, the bad, and the decisions different people and the community as a whole make to survive and keep their culture and values. This book is historic, looking at the drought of the early 2000s, but is also ongoing, as Blanco visits/checks in occasionally.
I do wish the Author's Note had been at the beginning of the book. In it she discusses her methods and why she used those methods. I have issues with anthropological work, though this is a different situation as these families chose to make the move to the city by drought and danger (cartels). I did still have a few questions upon finishing: did she eat with them, supplying her own food, or did she eat their food? Or did she only eat at community events, acquiring her own food after leaving the community for the night? Did she successfully keep her own money and knowledge from affecting her work? And how awkward/uncomfortable was that?
In any case, a very interesting book!