Book recommendation
Kier Salmon
k_salmon at ipinc.net
Thu Mar 1 04:34:37 UTC 2007
Hello, I'm new on the list; Kier Salmon.
I live in Portland, Oregon and grew up in México, D.F. (18 years
worth). Although my ultimate goal is to learn Nahuatl (porque soy
mula y me da coraje qué nunca pensé en hacerlo cuando era joven) at
this moment my short term goal is to understand how the language is
structured well enough so that the characters in a book I am planning
to write (Alternate history starting in 1475 ish) will be able to
speak in a way that has the "flavor" of the language, even though
most of the words are English. I'm less worried about portraying
them well (I feel "el carácter mexica" hasn't changed too much) than
I am to make their speech intelligible and at the same time give my
reader the knowledge that these aren't modern people with modern
ideology, what I call the "primitive moderns syndrome."
So the question for today is; I ran across the following book today
in Powells (our big bookstore):
Nahuas and Spaniards: Postconquest Central Mexican History and
Philology (Ucla Latin American Studies, Vol 76) by James Lockhart
Is it a worthwhile book for my purposes?
I've got close to 30 books waiting to be read... so I'm trying to be
picky about the new books I buy.
Gracias (hmmm, como se daban gracias los tenochcas?)
_______________________________________________
Nahuatl mailing list
Nahuatl at lists.famsi.org
http://www.famsi.org/mailman/listinfo/nahuatl
More information about the Nahuat-l
mailing list