On Mexican Time: A New Life in San Miguel
Stock image - cover art may vary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 0767903188
ISBN-13: 9780767903189
Publisher: Broadway
Release Date: January, 2000
Length: 304 Pages
Weight: Unavailable
Dimensions: 8.4 X 5.7 X 1.1 inches
Language: English
   
   

On Mexican Time: A New Life in San Miguel

Rate it!  
(Avg. 5)
Customer Reviews

Add to Wish List

From
$3.99 Free Shipping
in the USA

List Price: $28.99 Amazon.com:
N/A

In the mid-1980s, Tony Cohan and his artist wife, Masako, decided they had had enough of the hectic pace and inherent insecurities of life in Los Angeles and made tracks for the historic town of San Miguel de Allende in central Mexico. At first they rented rooms in a hotel. Then, when the hotel became less appealing, they graduated to renting...
Read more
Buy Now Filter by Shipping Prices
Seller Ships From   Condition Copies Price Shipping Qty. Order
Thrift Books WA Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Green Earth Books OR Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Atlanta Book Company GA Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Blue Cloud Books AZ Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Sierra Nevada Books NV Very Good 2 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Books Squared TX Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Yankee Clipper Books CT Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart

5 5

Customer Reviews

  A well crafted, extended essay on a premier Mexico destination

I have recently returned from San Miguel de Allende, a centuries old town of great importance in Mexican history as it was here that independence from Spain began. Cohan is a perceptive and careful writer who well captures the sensuous and culturally deep experience that is San Miguel. If you visit there, get this book and read it at the conclusion of your stay. You will see that he has said what you wanted to say about San Miguel. Highly recommended, as is San Miguel de Allende itself.
 
  ¡A mí me gusta!

I think he nails it.

It is the Mexico of those 15 years, and it is the gringo and gringa he brought to it. It was no paradise, but it was a great place to stare at the walls and the sky to draw closer to one's real wants. His discovery of the altiplano and its various cultures was for him like the end of Candide's philosophical journey. This was it for Cohan, a place to tend to his humanity, perhaps to finally understand it. In the end he and his wife only fear too much "progress". The status quo works well for them, both place and age appropriately.

Obviously, it is a work for those of us who have experienced Colonial Mexico, contemplated living there, but decided not. However, it is also a book for those who have looked beyond their own accident of place of birth, for those who have wondered what might have been, or could be. His characters might just help with the answers. They are varied hybrids, interesting all, of that singular experience called San Miguel de Allende.

And the house on Calle Flor? Well, it's the story within the story---all you ever need to know about Mexico revealed as the story of a house.
 
  Tony Cohan pulls the reader into colorful Mexico

Having just read "On Mexican Time" for the fourth time, I felt compelled to add my comments here. If the fact that I've read this book four times since 2001 doesn't fully express how I feel for it, allow me to continue. I was captivated by the very first pages and found that I couldn't put this book down. I usually read it during the long, cold Kentucky winters to bring a little warmth. Tony Cohan's style of writing speaks to me. He has a way of bringing San Miguel to life right there on the pages. This book evokes a deep need that I have to live an adventure. Each time, I read the last page with mixed emotions: happy to have finished the book, sad that I can't go on "living" at the house on Calle Flor. Tony and Masako seem the perfect couple with whom to enjoy a five hour dinner!
 
  A life lived in Mexico

This is a beautifully and vividly written novel of a man and his wife living between LA and a small town in Mexico. The trials and tribulations of live in the small town of San Miguel de Allende. The author is quick to point out what real events diminish the wishful aspects of life elsewhere outside of the UNited States. Whats best about this book is the life with people of the village.
 
  An enchanting reading experience

Finally! A book that depicts an accurate picture of a Mexican town... And not just any, but San Miguel de Allende, a true Mexican colonial jewel.Cohan's writing style and taste for anecdotes and cultural tidbits make this book my favorite. For once, I am happy to see Mexico and its people depicted with such gusto. We are very far from these daily acounts of violence perpetrated against American tourists visiting Mexico that can be found daily in the American papers, and that promote an inaccurate idea about our neighbor country. It's about time!