Mary has traveled throughout Mexico every October and November to interview local inhabitants, anthropologists, and anyone with knowledge of how this tradition is celebrated in their communities. Through study and observations, she learned the subtle differences in the way this tradition is celebrated among the different states in Mexico. Above all, she discovered a deep respect for this age-old tradition.
Mary J. Andrade, a Journalist and Photographer by trade, received the “Ohtli” Award in 1991 by Rosario Green, the Mexican Foreign Relation Secretary, for her journalistic labor serving the Mexican communities in Santa Clara County in California.
“The Mexican Silver Quil” award was presented to her in 2000 from the Secretary of Tourism of the Mexican Government for her first bilingual book of the series “Through the Eyes of the Soul, Day of the Dead in Mexico,” which she published covering the way the tradition is celebrated in Lake Patzcuaro and in the P’urhepecha Regions in the state of Michoacan. Additionally, she has published four more books of this series focusing on Oaxaca, Mexico City, Mixquic, Morelos, Puebla, Tlaxcala, Hidalgo, San Luis Potosí and Yucatan.
Her latest book for children “Remembering a Beautiful Angel,” was published in 2010 in electronic book format and is similarly distributed by Amazon.com
All her books have received The Latino Literary Hall of Fame awards in different categories.
Yes, thanks to this incredibly talented woman – my life is a fabulous cultural journey around the Bay Area and beyond.