Luminous golden and sparkling black pottery fashioned from mica-rich clays is the subject of this first comprehensive study of micaceous pottery in New Mexico. With over 60 color photographs, All That Glitters explores an exciting comtemporary art form as it evolved from the traditional culinary ware made by Pueblo and Jicarilla Apache Indians of the Northern Rio Grande region for at least 500 years. Duane Anderson's well-written narrative, supplemented by magnificent color images … is an essential book for anthropologists, historians, and students of American southwest cultures. --C. C. Kolb, Choice Vol. 37, no. 3 (November 1999) With its numerous excellent photographs, focus on potters, and uncluttered referencing style, the book succeeds as a popular introduction to micaceous art pottery. For those who have more academic interests, the book lays the groundwork for further research on micaceous pottery, documenting micaceous pottery production in the 1990s, and particularly in the four appendixes that inventory museum collections and list potters, suggesting sources for future studies on what came before the 1990s emergence of micaceous art pottery. --Dennis Gilpin, New Mexico Historical Review, Vol. 75:4 (October 2000) Bloomsbury Review Vol. 20, no. 1 (January/February 2000) --Alice Auer Connor Duane Anderson is an anthropologist specializing in precontact and historic period cultures of the American Southwest and Midwest. He is editor of Legacy: Southwest Indian Art at the School of American Research and vice-president of the School of American Research. Lonnie Vigil is an award-winning micaceous potter from Nambe Pueblo. Used Book in Good Condition