Picture of author.

Harvey Fergusson (1890–1971)

Author of The Conquest of Don Pedro

17+ Works 145 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Do not combine this page with that of Harvey Ferguson (one "s").

Works by Harvey Fergusson

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Fergusson II, Harvey
Birthdate
1890-01-28
Date of death
1971-08-27
Gender
male
Education
Washington and Lee University
Awards and honors
Western Literature Association's Distinguished Achievement Award (1971)
Disambiguation notice
Do not combine this page with that of Harvey Ferguson (one "s").

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
I've finished reading “The Blood of the Conquerors” by Harvey Fergusson with mixed feelings. I grew up in New Mexico only 30 years removed from the 1920s era that forms the bulk of the tale's time and location; however, the author's references to mountains, mesas, and rivers, including the flora and fauna, too often did not jell with my knowledge of the area, particularly that area around “Old Town,” a part – although never mentioned – of Albuquerque. In fact, many of the show more references to the physicality of the area were vague or flat-out misleading – for example, to go west from Old Town to get to the capital (assumed to be Santa Fe but never stated as such) is incorrect. One must go north of Old Town to get to Santa Fe. A famous part of any trip to Santa Fe back then would be traversing La Bajada Hill, but there was no mention of La Bajada. In addition, I thought the narrative was a bit plodding with no firm sense of a plot. In many ways the story was simply a biographical glimpse into a year or two of the life of a twenty-something fellow named Ramon who has a bloodline that includes the original Spanish conquerors of the “natives.” The story also has an undertone of racism against Mexicans by “gringos” and reverse racism by Mexicans against gringos (not uncommon in even present day New Mexico). Lacking a substantive plot and having a rather abrupt non-satisfying ending, my final impression was that the story was a kind of metaphor for life – you play, you work, you dream, you win, you lose, and you eventually settle for “what is” rather than what could have been. Maybe three-stars. show less

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
17
Also by
4
Members
145
Popularity
#142,478
Rating
3.9
Reviews
1
ISBNs
7

Charts & Graphs