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Ever wonder what a theater play looks like in its most raw form? Pedro Garcia and Lucio G. Rivera, two writers and veteran purveyors of art through theater, have teamed up to bring you "Tales of the Hidalgo Pump House". This book contains the play of the same title, along with a photo gallery of actors bringing the story to life on the stage. It features a short comic strip of supernatural beings and moments in the play illustrated and captioned by Mr. Rivera himself. This section is followed by a limited-yet interesting-historical account of the City of Hidalgo's settlement, as well as the people involved in different capacities in the development of the municipality and its pump house through multiple generations. The book closes with an ode to Hidalgo by Mr. Rivera.
The story is about a young man called Pedro Hidalgo who has a vision impairment and this vision impairment is characterized by colored spots that randomly appear in his line of sight. As he grows older and starts going to school, his eyesight becomes worse and his mother grows concerned. She wishes to take him to United States of America before it gets worse, but his country, Cuba, is undergoing a crisis and it was very difficult to leave. They eventually do manage to leave but when they find a doctor that is competent enough to help, he says that it is too late for Pedro to recover from his condition. In light of this situation, Pedro’s mother decides to enroll him into a school for visua...
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Hugh Hamill has sought to understand why this rebellion followed the course it did. He has analyzed the social, economic, intellectual and political temper of New Spain before 1810. The book deals with the Queretaro conspiracy and an examination of the insurrection from the Grito de Dolores of September 16, 1810 to the battle at the Bridge of Calderon on January 17, 1811.
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