Margaret Randall (1936) was born in New York City but grew up in Albuquerque and lived half of her adult life in Mexico, Cuba, and Nicaragua. When she returned to the U.S. in 1984 she was ordered deported under the U.S. Immigration and Nationality's McCarran-Walter Act. The government alleged that her writings, "went against the good order and happiness of the United States." She won her case in 1989.
She is a local poet who reads nationally and internationally. Among her recent books of poetry are My Town, As If The Empty Chair / Como Si La Silla Vacia, and The Rhizome As A Field of Broken Bones, all from Wings Press, San Antonio, Texas. A feminist poet's reminiscence of Che Guevara, Che On My Mind, is just out from Duke University Press, a new collection of essays, More Than Things, is out from The University of Nebraska Press, and Daughter of Lady Jaguar Shark, a single long-poem with 15 photographs, is now available from Wings. Her most recent poetry collection is About Little Charlie Lindbergh (also from Wings Press).
Randall resides in Albuquerque with her partner, the painter Barbara Byers, and travels widely to read and lecture. You can find out more about Margaret, her writings and upcoming readings at, www.margaretrandall.org.
The beautiful canyons and ruins of Mesa Verde National Park and Ute Mountain Tribal park offer different experiences in preservation and visitation.
Continue reading...15. November 2013
A perfect introduction to river rafting through the beautiful canyons of northern Utah.
Continue reading...08. November 2013
A glimpse of a disappearing world in one of the most rugged terrains on the planet.
Continue reading...05. November 2013
In Albuquerque we’ve become accustomed to hearing about another police shooting in which an unarmed person is killed. In the past several years we’ve had two dozen of these, with 17 fatalities. This past week our city saw two civilian shootings, each of them resulting in high-speed chases and terrorizing neighborhoods for several hours. It feels as if we are trying to catch up with notoriously violent cities such as Chicago or Los Angeles...
Continue reading...01. November 2013
Margaret Randall guides us through a unique Washington experience in the heart of the nation's capitol.
Continue reading...24. October 2013
A magical jaunt through otherworldly hoodoos and the calcium of stars.
Continue reading...18. October 2013
The rugged beauty and cultural distinctness of America's largest state make it a country unto itself.
Continue reading...15. October 2013
We’ve all been privy to public service announcements and commercial advertisements urging us to spend money we don’t have in order to save an economy being squandered by our elected officials and the corporations that increasingly pull their puppet strings. During the 1960s and ‘70s we often said we wished the military had to hold a bake sale to fund its B-52s and that ordinary people might have access to government funding for projects as worthy as peace and education...
Continue reading...11. October 2013
A journey through the home of gods and goddesses and pondering mythological manifestations in our daily lives.
Continue reading...11. October 2013
While going about our ordinary lives—though those cannot, at the moment, include accessing federal Internet sites, visiting a National Park, or being able to take advantage of a federally-funded health study—most of us seem oblivious to the fact that we are experiencing a coup...
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22. November 2013
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