Contributors

For over a century, El Palacio has been a forum for voices exploring New Mexico’s art, archaeology, history, and landscape. Explore the writers, photographers, historians, and scientists whose perspectives have defined the magazine’s pages—past and present.

Levi Romero

Levi Romero is Professor Emeritus in the Chicana and Chicanos Studies department at the University of New Mexico. He was selected as the Inaugural New Mexico State Poet Laureate, 2020-2023. He is the author of A Poetry of Remembrance: New and Rejected Works, and coauthor of New Mexico Poetry Anthology (2023)Querencia: Reflections on the New Mexico Homelandand other publications.

Los Molinitos de la Gente

After the Spanish introduced wheat to the Americas, molinitos (small gristmills) in New Mexico played a major role in the agricultural economy for centuries. Wheat, in its ground form as flour, was a staple during the Spanish colonial period of the fledgling Province of Nuevo México. Whole kernel flour could spoil, so it was baked into bizcochos (hard tack) that dried easily and kept for months.